Faced with persistent drought, California wants to store more water

(Los Angeles) More than two decades of devastating drought exacerbated by climate change means that California must collect, treat and desalinate much more water, the governor of this American state said Thursday.

Posted yesterday at 4:50 p.m.

Unveiling an “aggressive” new strategy to try to remedy declining water supplies, Gavin Newsom said he wanted to strengthen and modernize aging infrastructure to keep pace with a changing environment.

“Climate change means that the drought is not just going to be there for two years at a time as has historically been the case,” he said in a statement.

“Drought is a permanent feature here in the American West, and California will adapt to this new reality.”

The plan unveiled Thursday calls for more above-ground storage as well as developing better ways to capture the billions of liters of rain that typically go into the ocean.

It also plans to treat a lot more water and desalinate seawater.

For more than twenty years, the American West has been experiencing its worst drought in more than a millennium.

Scientists predict that California’s already-stressed water supplies will decline another 10% over the next few decades, as the current drought is part of a long-term aridification of the region. A process accelerated by climate change caused by human activities.

“Regardless of drought or flooding, in this altered climate there will be less water available,” the state’s 16-page plan says.

“California needs to capture, recycle, desalinate and store more water […] to use water that would otherwise be unusable, spread out the supply efficiently, and expand our ability to store water from large storms for dry spells.”


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