Confidential Related BU - water ca 2025

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The California Water System Central Valley Project. State Water Project. Colorado River. The Delta. Benefits. Environment. Sustainability. Infrastructure Investment.
The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) is responsible for ensuring that Californias investor-owned water utilities deliver clean, safe, and reliable water to their customers at reasonable rates.
California measures water use across three main sectors. On average, communities use 10%, agriculture uses 40% of water statewide, and the environment uses 50%.
Water is protected for the use and benefit of all Californians. Californias waters cannot be owned by individuals, groups, businesses, or governmental agencies. But permits, licenses, and registrations give individuals and others the right to beneficially use reasonable amounts of water.
As California continues to grapple with ongoing drought conditions, state lawmakers have introduced new regulations to curb unnecessary water use. Assembly Bill 1572 now prohibits the use of potable waterwater safe for drinking and bathingto irrigate non-functional turf.
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Riparian rights have priority over appropriative rights. An owner cannot lose a riparian right through non-use and cannot ordinarily transfer the right to another user. Riparian rights extend only to water that naturally occurs in the lake or stream, and storage of water for later use is not allowed.
California has a dual system of water rights that recognizes both riparian and appropriative rights. As mentioned above, there are four main types of water rights that pertain to surface water: riparian rights, pre-1914 and post-1914 appropriative rights, and prescriptive rights.
These include pueblo rights, which can only be held by municipalities that were originally Mexican or Spanish pueblos, and federal reserved rights, which can only be held by the federal government. Individuals can hold riparian water rights, appropriative rights, and prescriptive water rights.

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