
New state water plan would increase water exports by 373,000 acre feet per year on average
The Gavin Newsom Administration on November 21 announced two separate but related actions that will have a big impact on protections for Delta smelt, Sacramento River winter-run Chinook salmon and other endangered fish species.
First, the California Department of Water Resources (DWR) issued a draft Environmental Impact Report on the long-term operations of the State Water Project (SWP) that actually would increase Delta water exports.
Second, the Newsom Administration announced that it intends to sue the federal government over the Trump Administration’s recent biological opinion that would increase water flows from federal water projects to corporate agribusiness interests in the San Joaquin Valley and away from the San Francisco Bay-Delta, imperiling endangered fish like the Delta smelt.
The Department of Water Resources said the first action, the draft EIS, “enables California's water project operations to avoid relying on proposed federal biological opinions announced last month to achieve environmental approval to operate consistent with state law.”
Instead, DWR said it will seek approval from the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) to operate the SWP in a way that supposedly “improves” protections for fish and complies with the California Endangered Species Act.
“This draft points to a more sophisticated and nimble way to manage the State Water Project to improve our ability to protect species and operate more flexibly. This is essential in order to capture water when it’s available and leave more water