CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JULY 1, 2022, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“GROUNDWATER LAW HAS NOT STOPPED
SUBSIDENCE”
Drive
almost any road in the vast San Joaquin Valley and you’ll see irrigation pipes
standing up several feet tall in the middle of fields and orchards, pipes that
once were underground.
These
metallic artifacts are emblematic of the utter failure of a 2014 law once
billed by then-Gov. Jerry Brown as a landmark achievement. The omnipresent
pipes, often unnoticed by speeding motorists, are symptoms of subsidence, the
result of decades of overpumping groundwater in all the frequent episodes when
California endured drought conditions, right up to this moment.
Pumping
their ever-deeper wells has been about the only way the state’s huge and
nationally vital agribusiness community could maintain production of everything
from peaches to peas, broccoli to pistachios, tomatoes to citrus, cotton to
cauliflower, when snowpack has been thin atop the high Sierra Nevada Mountains
and the state’s two large aqueducts cut back their deliveries to mere drops –
as they’ve had to do this summer.
The
2014 law was actually a rather ho-hum, non-crisis approach to something that
was already a big problem many years before the law passed. The timetable of
the law has increased metering on wells tapping into groundwater, but leaves no
limit on what anyone can pump until 2030, when it may be too late.
For,
as a new Stanford University study shows, not only are the state’s groundwater
reserves disappearing, but it’s decreasingly likely they can ever be restored
to historic previous levels, or that the land subsidence which leaves
irrigation pipes standing high above the land they water can ever be completely
reversed.
The
comforting thought behind making water wells ever deeper as farms chase new
groundwater supplies has always been that recharging the natural storage basins
below ground level will eventually replace whatever is used.
The
study, from Stanford’s School of Earth, Energy and Environmental Sciences.
suggests this isn’t so. In fact, the research suggests ground can continue to
sink even if groundwater levels are stable or rising. That’s because when water
is taken from the ground, the sheer weight of the land above the storage basin
causes a partial collapse of sub-surface rocks around the storage spaces, known
as aquifers.
Even
refilling those spaces above capacity – not a realistic possibility in the near
future – cannot fully reverse this effect. The Stanford research indicated it’s
unrealistic to expect ground levels ever to re-rise more than about one-third
of the distance they have dropped.
Subsidence
levels vary a bit, but so far, they typically total about 20 feet over the last
65 years, gradual but now very visible. That only becomes disastrous when it
affects things on the surface, like cracking roads and bridges and moving
foundations of homes and other buildings.
The
2014 law, called the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act, forced local water
districts to make plans for avoiding “significant and unreasonable” new
subsidence. It did not require those agencies to figure out how to prevent disputes
between farmers or cities when one well-owner drills deeper and siphons off
supplies from others.
This
very phenomenon has caused at least two episodes where portions of Central
Valley cities suddenly saw their faucets run dry, forcing them to import
supplies from unaffected nearby areas. This can be both expensive and unfair,
but there’s often little the owners of suddenly dry wells can do about it. For
one thing, farmers and cities whose wells dry up can’t always tell where their
water went or who took it. They can only be sure it flowed downhill and away from
them.
All
of which makes it very obvious that the 2014 law was far too meek when it
passed and that more serious action to regulate and reduce groundwater use is
needed.
But
that is not a priority for the current Legislature, dominated by coastal, urban
politicians whose constituents are untouched by what’s happening under the
ground where their food supplies are grown. Nor have Central Valley lawmakers
done much, not wishing to offend corporate farms that often donate big campaign
dollars.
Which
means more fields will be fallowed in the next few years, more wells will run
dry, more cities will take emergency steps to find water supplies and the
ground will likely sink ever lower.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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