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Envisioning Futures for the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta Ellen Hanak Public Policy Institute of California Jay Lund University of California, Davis PPIC 1 Authored by Interdisciplinary Team Economists: Ellen Hanak, PPIC Richard Howitt, UC Davis Engineers: Jay Lund, UC Davis William Fleenor, UC Davis Geologist: Jeffrey Mount, UC Davis Biologist: Peter Moyle, UC Davis PPIC 2 Major Themes Current Delta is unsustainable for almost all stakeholders Improved understanding of the Delta provides opportunities for new solutions Promising alternatives exist Most Delta users have ability to adapt Promising solutions are unlikely to arise from a stakeholder-only process PPIC 3 Outline Why the Delta matters California’s Delta crisis New thinking about the ecosystem Some long-term alternatives Screening of alternatives Recommendations PPIC 4 The Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta Above sea level Sea level to -10 feet -10 feet to -15 feet -15 feet and below Export pumps PPIC 5 Why the Delta Matters to Californians Water Supply Ecosystem Agriculture Infrastructure Recreation Housing PPIC 6 Outline Why the Delta matters California’s Delta crisis New thinking about the ecosystem Some long-term alternatives Screening of alternatives Conclusions and recommendations PPIC 7 A Three-pronged Crisis Levees at increasing risk – Sea level rise and sinking land – Floods and earthquakes Steep declines in many fish species – Many are “listed” – Culprits: invasive species, habitat loss, pumps Governing institutions lacking – Resurgence of legal actions PPIC 8 Emerging Policy Responses New studies on fish declines and levee risks Emergency funds for levee repairs “Delta Vision” process Bay-Delta Conservation Plan Stakeholders promoting several approaches – Shoring up levees, peripheral canal, reduced water exports PPIC 9 Outline Why the Delta matters California’s Delta crisis New thinking about the ecosystem Some long-term alternatives Screening of alternatives Recommendations PPIC 10 Since 1920s, California Policy Has Aimed to Keep the Delta Fresh , , 1945 USBR report Delta farmers and water exporters benefit from low salinity PPIC 11 In 1940s, Central Valley Project Created “Hydraulic Barrier” for Water Exports Arrows show movement of fresh water from storage PPIC 12 Hydraulic Barrier Prevents Seasonal and Dry-year Salinity Incursions Dotted lines show extent of saltwater incursions 1870s drought Hydraulic barrier (since 1940s) Summers, 1908-1917 PPIC 13 But Static, Freshwater Delta Not Good for Native Species Native species evolved in a fluctuating Delta Asiatic clam Alien species have taken hold and harm native species Alien species do best with constant salinity (fresh or saline) Restoring fluctuating conditions may be key to native species’ survival Brazilian waterweed Overbite clam PPIC 14 Outline Why the Delta matters California’s Delta crisis New thinking about the ecosystem Some long-term alternatives Screening of alternatives Recommendations PPIC 15 Nine Delta Alternatives Freshwater Delta – Two levee-based alternatives – Physical salinity barrier Fluctuating Delta – Two peripheral canal alternatives – Armored-island aqueduct Reduced-exports Delta (*also fluctuating) – Opportunistic Delta* – Eco-Delta* – Abandoned Delta PPIC 16 5) South Delta Restoration Aqueduct: A New Peripheral Canal Idea Main rivers Brackish tidal area Delta waterways Freshwater tidal area Canal Optional canal Release facility Improves South Delta and lower San Joaquin River water quality Lower San Joaquin flood bypass for flood control and ecosystem benefits PPIC 17 6) Armored-Island Aqueduct: A Through-Delta Solution Channel to river Dredged channel Fortified levee Potential flooded islands Keeps eastern Delta fresh Allows western and central Delta to fluctuate PPIC 18 8) Eco-Delta: An Example of Local Specialization Main rivers Brackish tidal area Delta waterways Freshwater tidal area Wetlands Flooded islands/bypass Experimental Possible storage Upland game/waterfowl Allows opportunistic pumping, but at lower levels PPIC 19 Outline Why the Delta matters California’s Delta crisis New thinking about the ecosystem Some long-term alternatives Screening of alternatives Recommendations PPIC 20 Screening Criteria Ecosystem performance Water exports Economic and financial costs – Focus: water supply and salinity – Tools: models and existing studies Other Delta services (qualitative) PPIC 21 Fluctuating Delta Alternatives Are Most Promising Alternatives Environmental Performance Annual Water Exports Economic and Financial Costs 1. Levees as Usual Poor 0 – 6+ maf ~$2 Billion + failures 2. Fortress Delta Poor > $4 Billion + lost islands 3. Saltwater Barrier Poor $2 – 3 Billion + lost islands 6+ maf 4. Peripheral Canal Plus 5. South Delta Aqueduct 6. Armored-Island Aqueduct Promising allows Delta to fluctuate $2 – 3 Billion + < $70 M/year Mixed $1 – 2 Billion + < $30 M/year $2 – 3 Billion + < $41 M/year Promising 2 – 8 maf $0.7 – 2.2 Billion + < $170 M/year 8. Eco-Delta Best? 1 – 5 maf Several $ Billion + < $600 M/year 9. Abandoned Delta Poor 0 7. Opportunistic Delta $500 Million + ~$1.2 Billion/year PPIC 22 Outline Why the Delta matters California’s Delta crisis New thinking about the ecosystem Some long-term alternatives Screening of alternatives Recommendations PPIC 23 Steps Needed for a Long-term Solution Focus on promising alternatives Create technical track to explore solutions with problem-solving R&D Enhance regional and statewide representation in Delta land use decisions (e.g. SF BCDC) Implement “beneficiaries pay” financing Establish mitigation mechanisms – everyone will not “get better together” PPIC 24 “No Regrets” Short-term Actions Emergency preparedness “Do not resuscitate” list for some islands Delta land use – Flood control guidelines for urbanization – Habitat protection Restoration projects for pelagic fish habitat PPIC 25 Questions? For the full report, research brief, and other materials, go to: www.ppic.org PPIC 26