Gov. Jerry Brown of
California is fired up about nailing his citizens to the wall, should
they dare to use more than their allotted amount of water. On Sunday, Brown
said that those who did not take shorter showers would be punished with fines
of up to $500, in order to cut urban water use 25 percent; now, according
to CBS News, water authorities will use “smart meters”
to monitor water use and update them for purposes of fines. None of
this will do much good.
Let’s assume that
Brown’s plan works, and California saves
approximately 1.5 million acre feet of water, or 490 billion gallons
of water. That barely touches the 11 trillion gallons of
water
California needs in order to replenish its supplies from the drought. It’s
also a wild misallocation of resources.
Let’s begin with
actual wastes of water in the state of California. Thanks to Environmental
Protection Agency regulations as well as local state regulations aimed
at protecting the three-inch Delta smelt, a fish about which Americans supposedly
care deeply, California currently pumps 150
billion gallons of usable water out to sea each year. Normally, that water
would go to the fields of the Central Valley, the fruit and nuts producing
region of California that supplies so many of those goods to the rest of
the country. Instead, the entire region has gone dry, jacking unemployment
rates up to 40 percent in some areas. As the Mayor
of Mendota,
California, a heavily Hispanic farming community of 10,000, told me
back in 2009:
President Obama
needs to come out here immediately. Just the other day, 52 other mayors and
I sent a letter to President Obama calling on him to visit Fresno County to
see what the impact has been. We have the highest unemployment in the state
of California. I don’t have a problem with endangered species, but water
distribution must be looked at.
Fat chance.
Instead, those communities have gone dry. Now the whole state is going
dry. But at least the delta smelt are thriving.
The smelt aren’t
the only fish
benefitting from generous water usage by the state of California. In
2014, Congressman Tom McClintock (R-CA) explained, “last month the Bureau of
Reclamation drained Folsom and other reservoirs on the American and
Stanislaus rivers of more than 70,000 acre feet of water – enough to meet the
annual needs of a city of half a million people – for the comfort and convenience
of fish.” The goal: to push baby salmon to the Pacific Ocean, where they swim
anyway, and to change the temperature of the water for their benefit. ug
Overall, 2.6 million
acre-feet of water have been washed into San Francisco Bay to help
the fish.
But the biggest problem
in California is that the government has refused to build the reservoirs
and dams necessary to actually save water when the rain does come. As the
Wall Street Journal points out, Israel has weathered droughts for years. So
has Arizona. Both built infrastructure. California has not, largely
because politicians like Jerry Brown stopped such construction decades ago.
The Wall
Street Journal
points out:
Money is not the
obstacle. Since 2000 voters have approved five bonds authorizing $22 billion
in spending for water improvements… desalination projects have been abandoned…
some areas have been slow to shift from fixed rates.
But there’s plenty of
cash to go around for Brown’s $100 billion fantasy choo-choo train.
Assuming none of
that will change, it is not urban populations in California using a disproportionate
share of water. It is farmers. Farming represents no more than two percent
of the California economy, yet represents 80 percent of its human water
usage. A full 10 percent of California’s water goes to farming
almonds
– 1.1 trillion gallons of water. Another 100 billion gallons goes to
alfalfa, which is largely shipped overseas for use in places like Japan.
Brown says that farmers
aren’t just watering their lawns, but that’s the point: even if all Californians
stopped watering their lawns completely, that wouldn’t solve the drought. California
may lead the nation in production of vegetables (one third of all veggies
in the US come from California) and fruits and nuts (two
thirds from the Golden State). But so what? Heavily subsidizing farming in
California is still heavily subsidizing farming in California. Subsidies
boost production. That doesn’t make subsidies justifiable in a state supported
almost entirely on other industries.
California’s drought
is partly about weather, but it’s just as much about government mismanagement.
Environmentalism trumped good policy; now, subsidies trump rational distribution
via market pricing. The result: a very smelly situation.
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CommentsGeorgia should have several reservoir projects underway right now to protect us from the next drought.Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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