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The current outlook for water year 2023 is another year of drought as the third consecutive winter with La Nina conditions is expected. The State is taking action to prepare for the possibility of a fourth dry year. All of California's 58 counties are under a drought emergency proclamation.
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) is now predicting that California only has enough water supply to last one year.
Three factors \u2013 rising temperatures, groundwater depletion, and a shrinking Colorado River \u2013 mean the most populous U.S. state will face decades of water shortages and must adapt. The current drought afflicting California is indeed historic, but not because of the low precipitation totals.
The California Water Plan (CWP), updated every five years, is the State's strategic plan for sustainably and equitably managing and developing water resources for current and future generations.
Only a small part of the mid-Atlantic region is expected to have an especially wet fall. After November, the probability La Niña continues drops down. By the start of 2023, there's a less-than-50% chance we're still in a La Niña pattern.
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The problem is inadequate infrastructure and a regulatory system that requires a huge amount of water to run straight to the ocean, so we aren't able to capture what we need to make it through the dry times. The loss of available water also has significant impacts on our ability to generate power.
Newsom has pleaded with residents and businesses to reduce their water consumption by 15%. But in March, urban water usage was up by 19% compared to March 2020, the year the current drought began. It was the highest March water consumption since 2015, the State Water Resources Control Board reported earlier this week.
In the 19-page document released today, the Newsom administration outlined efforts that include bolstering recycled water supplies and storage capacity, both in reservoirs and groundwater. Included are: Increasing desalination of brackish water by 28,000 acre-feet per year by 2030 and 84,000 acre-feet per year by 2040.
In the 19-page document released today, the Newsom administration outlined efforts that include bolstering recycled water supplies and storage capacity, both in reservoirs and groundwater. Included are: Increasing desalination of brackish water by 28,000 acre-feet per year by 2030 and 84,000 acre-feet per year by 2040.
No, California's drought isn't over. California today issued emergency drought rules aimed at wasteful water use. Although snowpack is 150% of average today, climatologists predict dry conditions for the rest of the season. And conservation still lags.

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