The Salton Sea: Water Scarcity in Southern California
Geolocation: | 33° 13' 54.8518", -115° 42' 32.6905" |
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Total Population | 1.51,500,000 millionmillion |
Total Area | 21,70021,700 km² 8,378.37 mi² km2 |
Climate Descriptors | Arid/desert (Köppen B-type) |
Predominent Land Use Descriptors | agricultural- cropland and pasture, conservation lands |
Important Uses of Water | Agriculture or Irrigation, Domestic/Urban Supply, Other Ecological Services |
Contents
Summary
Natural, Historic, Economic, Regional, and Political Framework
Issues and Stakeholders
Water scarcity and overuse due to population growth
NSPD: Water Quantity
Stakeholder Types: Sovereign state/national/federal government, Environmental interest
The QSA was developed and implemented because of the increasing populations in California and neighboring states. California was repeatedly overusing their share from the Colorado River to meet the demand of the growing population in the southern parts of the state. Population growth and water scarcity were driving factors for the creation of the QSA.
The water transfer arrangements made in the QSA are potentially highly problematic for the maintenance of the Salton Sea as it is sustained almost entirely through agricultural runoff from the Imperial Valley. One of the water transfer deals included in the agreement involves 400,000 acre-feet of water being transferred from agricultural areas in the Imperial Valley to the coast of southern California, effectively reducing the inflow to the Salton Sea by 360,000 fewer acre-feet per year (Forsman, 2014). Although the water scarcity issue has been temporarily resolved for the residents of urban southern California, the issue has been shifted east to the Imperial Valley. To mitigate for the loss of agricultural runoff, IID is required to replenish the Salton Sea with about 32 billion gallons of water per year for the first 15 years of the agreement- after which they are no longer legally required to supplement the Sea (Cohen, 2014).Uncertain restoration plan
NSPD: Water Quality, Ecosystems
Stakeholder Types: Sovereign state/national/federal government, Environmental interest, Community or organized citizens
Decreasing water quality
NSPD: Water Quantity
Stakeholder Types: Sovereign state/national/federal government, Environmental interest, Community or organized citizens
Decreasing air quality and toxic dust
NSPD: Ecosystems
Stakeholder Types: Sovereign state/national/federal government, Environmental interest, Community or organized citizens
Analysis, Synthesis, and Insight
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Key Questions
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