SAN JOAQUIN RIVER, CA The San Joaquin, which begins high in the Sierra Nevada, navigates a dense grid of Central Valley farm fields as it flows northward toward the San Francisco Bay. More than 70 percent of the river water is used for irrigation.
The story of the Central Valley of California is the story of much of the American West, and of other inhabited deserts around the world. We have altered the driest parts of California, Nevada, and Arizona to fulfill our ambitions, and for years we have been able to ignore their natural limits. Now a growing population and a changing climate are exposing those limits as never before.And yet the Central Valley is in many ways an agricultural paradise. The soil is rich—remarkably so. The weather is warm—reliably so. More than 300 different crops, from rice and asparagus to pomegranates and oranges, thrive on the valley’s wide, flat floor, and at times grow better here than anywhere else in the country. Virtually all of the almonds, olives, and walnuts grown in the United States come from the Central Valley, as does most of the nation’s domestic supply of canned tomatoes.For all its riches the valley looks nothing like paradise, and in drought years like this one, its shortcomings are excruciatingly obvious. Dust rises from fallowed fields, often thickly enough to obscure the snowcapped Sierra Nevada in the distance. The whole place seems to stagger under a heavy blanket of grit and heat.Here, where rain is just a lucky break, farmers have long depended on two interconnected sources of water. Many use surface flows from the San Joaquin and Sacramento Rivers, divvied up according to water rights that date back to the 19th century and delivered to fields via a complex network of pipes and canals. Most supplement this plumbing with groundwater, and in the driest corners of the valley, aquifers are so overdrawn that fields have sunk by more than 30 feet. “The pattern of groundwater use in California practically defines the term unsustainable,” says Jay Famiglietti, a hydrologist from the University of California, Irvine, who uses satellite data to study water supplies. On this land farming takes money: money for the equipment to move water to fields, money to survive the driest years, and money to fight the constant legal and political battles over water in the state. Most farmers in the Central Valley win and lose on a grand scale, cultivating hundreds of acres of land and selling millions of dollars of crops every season. Many have invested in lucrative but thirsty crops such as almonds and pistachios, betting that they’ll get enough water each year to keep the trees alive.
That gamble is getting riskier. In the western United States, most water arrives in winter storms, which swoop in from the Pacific and dump snow atop the region’s mountain ranges. Mountain snowpack serves as the West’s water tower, and over the past century Westerners have built hundreds of dams to catch and store snowmelt as it fills the region’s rivers in spring. Today most major rivers in the West are saddled with a complex system of dams, canals, and aqueducts. Most years the Colorado River never reaches its mouth in the Gulf of California, and its once lush delta has become a vast mudflat. Salmon and other fish are struggling or gone altogether. Hetch Hetchy, a mountain valley said to have rivaled Yosemite in beauty, was flooded in 1923 to provide water to San Francisco.
Yet in their way these systems work. They built and sustain cities like Phoenix, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, and Denver. They make uninhabitable land habitable. And they make it possible to grow food in places like the Central Valley. The valley represents just under 2 percent of the country’s cropland, but in dollar terms it produces nearly half of the nation’s fruit and nuts. As the climate changes, scientists predict that the southwestern U.S. will get less precipitation, and the northwestern U.S. will get more. They’re not so sure about the future of precipitation in the Central Valley, where it may decrease, increase, or simply fall at different times during the year than it used to.
The Impact of Snowpack
Mountain snowpacks are frozen reservoirs, their spring melt supplying as much as 75 percent of the West’s water. Decades of measurements, taken by hand or automatic sensors, show dramatic decline. Readings are taken yearly on April 1, when snowpack water content has historically peaked.
Tapping the West
More than 700 reservoirs capture flow in major river basins, bringing water to places that could not otherwise be as populated—Las Vegas, Phoenix, or San Diego, for example—or as agriculturally productive.
Living With Fire
Vegetation such as chaparral and ponderosa pine flourishes with occasional wildfires. But a drier West has seen more frequent and intense burns. Protecting a rising population has hiked firefighting costs.
As in most of the rest of the American West, fortunes depend less on how much precipitation falls from the sky than how much of it falls as snow and how long that snow stays in the mountains. Despite the occasional severe winters, western snowpacks have declined in recent decades, and key researchers expect the trend to accelerate. “Warmer winters are reducing the amount of snow stored in the mountains, and they’re causing snowpacks to melt earlier in the spring,” says Philip Mote, director of the Oregon Climate Change Research Institute at Oregon State University. Shrinking snowpacks and earlier snowmelts mean—in practical terms—that the region faces a persistent and worsening drought.Early this year, as the East Coast shivered, California baked. January wildfires burned suburban homes, a sinking reservoir exposed the long-drowned ruins of a gold rush town, and in the spring, Yosemite Falls shrank to a trickle. As the drought crept toward historic levels, the political conversation settled into familiar ruts.Farmers called on Congress to lift protections for endangered fish species. Urbanites pointed out that an average of 41 percent of California’s water is used for agriculture, while less than 11 percent goes to cities (nearly 49 percent stays in the rivers). Sound bites prevailed, and any sign of rain silenced the conversation entirely.
DUST STORM OVER LAKE POWELL, AZ A dust storm spreads over Lake Powell, one of the Colorado River’s largest reservoirs. In April it was 39 percent full, one of its lowest levels since the reservoir filled in the 1960s.
“And it never failed that during the dry years the people forgot about the rich years,” John Steinbeck wrote in his 1952 epic, East of Eden, a family tragedy set in the Salinas Valley of the early 20th century, “and during the wet years they lost all memory of the dry years.”
SUN CITY, AZ The Central Arizona Project, a 336-mile-long system of canals and pipelines, carries Colorado River water through the desert to the Phoenix metro area. The population of the Phoenix area grew 4 times larger between 1970 and 2010.
Such forgetfulness is almost a western birthright. But it doesn’t have to be. For proof, look to Australia, a place with deep parallels to California and the West.Both California and Australia have desert cores and a temperate, urbanized edge. Both depend on complex plumbing to move their water: In fact, the pair of Canadian brothers who built some of California’s first irrigation systems in the late 1800s also helped engineer the water-delivery systems of Australia’s arid Murray-Darling Basin. Water Demands
Domestic and municipal water use is highest per capita in the U.S. Naturally dry, the West relies on irrigation to keep landscaping green. California’s agricultural dominance accounts for much of the farm-water usage.
Australia’s Big Dry, a decade-long drought that began around the start of this century, led at first to the same kind of political bickering heard recently in California. But after years of environmental destruction, urban water stress, and great suffering by many dryland farmers, Australian politicians—and farmers—took some serious risks. “At the peak of the drought, it became very apparent that the environment doesn’t lie,” says Mike Young, a professor at the University of Adelaide who was active in the country’s drought response. Australia reduced urban water use by investing billions in conservation, education, and efficiency improvements. Most important, it began to reform the old water allocation system, which, like California’s, had promised specific amounts of water to rights holders. The country instituted a system that guaranteed a minimum supply of water for the environment, then divided the remainder into shares that could be quickly sold and traded—or stored for the next season. Farmers fought the changes, but with a financial incentive to use less water, they soon got more creative and more efficient. Water use dropped, and though consumption has risen since the drought eased in 2010, it remains below pre-drought levels in towns and cities.
LAKE MEAD, NV About 90 percent of the drinking water for Las Vegas comes from Lake Mead, the Colorado River reservoir created by Hoover Dam. As of early August the lake was only 38 percent full—a historic low.
California’s water system—with annual expenditures exceeding $30 billion—is a long way from following Australia’s “shining example,” says University of California, Berkeley, economist Michael Hanemann. “California and most of the West haven’t done a damn thing to put ourselves in a good position to handle drought,” he says. “We have been unwilling to make the sort of changes ahead of time that we absolutely need [to make] to face a drier future.”Yet after decades of unregulated, unsustainable pumping of groundwater in California, some regional authorities have instituted rules to protect groundwater supplies. Los Angeles and other large cities have dramatically improved water efficiency. “There’s a lot of slack in the system that we’ve tolerated for a long time, just because we could get away with it,” says Peter Gleick, president of the Pacific Institute. “Now we have to learn to live within the limits of what nature provides.”
LAKE OROVILLE, CA Boats crowd a marina in this large reservoir north of Sacramento. The state water system delivers Sierra Nevada snowmelt to 25 million Californians.
The story of water in the American West hasn’t changed: It’s still a tale of ambition and optimism, both in dangerous amounts. But the California drought, and the droughts to come, could force the start of a new chapter.
John Diener plans to be part of it. Unlike many Central Valley farmers, he hasn’t moved into Fresno, to farm at a distance. He still attends church in nearby Riverdale, and when pressed for time, he goes to the Spanish-language Mass at the mission church his aunt and uncle established in the 1940s. But although he’s attached to the place, and to the land his family claimed nearly a century ago, he’s a pragmatist to the core.
This year Diener didn’t receive any river water, so he fallowed half his acreage. He planted tomatoes and broccoli, watering them with the high-efficiency underground drip systems he’s purchased in recent years. He is working with a local public-private partnership to turn his sugar beets into ethanol. And of course, he’s tending his 20 acres of cactus. He’s not making money off his plants yet, but he’s optimistic that they will find a market: Prickly pear pads, or nopals, are a wildly popular vegetable in Mexico and elsewhere in Latin America, and they have value as selenium-rich supplements. It’s hardly the future his uncle and father expected. But if the elder Dieners were here today, they’d probably approve. Adaptation helped them survive too.