Water

Fine Tuning the “Water Renaissance” Plan

Fine Tuning the “Water Renaissance” Plan

The recently released “Water Renaissance” plan, a product of “conservation groups and tribes,” gets a very big idea right. There is no reason why California’s coastal megacities should have to import water. With that one visionary presumption, this report has made a major contribution. In fact, it doesn’t go far enough. With massive, targeted investments,...

By Edward Ring

Differentiating Between Capacity and Yield

Differentiating Between Capacity and Yield

Whether it’s an energy project or a water project, it’s important to avoid conflating capacity with actual production, or yield. With energy projects, that difference is much more certain than with water projects. For example, in 2024, California’s lone remaining nuclear power plant at Diablo Canyon, with an output capacity of 2.4 gigawatts, would have produced...

By Edward Ring

When it Comes to Water, California Needs to Think Big Again

When it Comes to Water, California Needs to Think Big Again

For most of the previous century, Californians successfully designed and built big water infrastructure. In sixty years, from 1910 through 1970, we built the most impressive system of interbasin transfers in the world. The Los Angeles Aqueduct, Hetch Hetchy Aqueduct, Colorado River Aqueduct, Delta Mendota Canal, Friant-Kern Canal, and California Aqueduct. Altogether these conveyances are...

By Edward Ring

Federal Options for Large Scale Seawater Desalination

Federal Options for Large Scale Seawater Desalination

The Carlsbad desalination plant is reportedly operating at half-capacity, basically because it’s less expensive to import water from the Colorado River. That is likely to change, as Arizona’s Department of Water Resources is negotiating with the San Diego County Water Authority to purchase some of the water they get from the Colorado River. The funds from Arizona will...

By Edward Ring

Large Scale Desalination Belongs in California’s Water Strategy

Large Scale Desalination Belongs in California’s Water Strategy

In debates over water policy in California, a common argument is that if only we managed the systems we’ve already got, there would be plenty of water for everyone. Agricultural and urban use would not have to be rationed, taxpayers and ratepayers would not have to be unnecessarily burdened, and we wouldn’t have to wait...

By Edward Ring

California’s Drought is Over, But We Still Must Invest in Water Supply Projects

California’s Drought is Over, But We Still Must Invest in Water Supply Projects

For the last 25 years, the US Drought Monitor (USDM), a collaborative effort by the University of Nebraska, NOAA, the USDA, and other experts throughout the country, has released a weekly map that shows the location and intensity of drought across the United States. On January 8, for the first time ever, USDM’s weekly map showed the...

By Edward Ring

The Denominators of our Prosperity – Energy and Water

The Denominators of our Prosperity – Energy and Water

The premise of this newsletter is that abundant and affordable energy and water are prerequisites to solving every other challenge standing in the way of lowering California’s overall cost-of-living. Not only because the cost for energy and water directly impacts the cost to build homes, or pay household utility bills, or engage in industrial production,...

By Edward Ring

Reversing California’s Policies of Scarcity

Reversing California’s Policies of Scarcity

A new year has begun, and here in California, 2026 promises to deliver challenges that may at last transform the state’s energy and water policies. Let’s begin with a quick look at California’s current water policies in action. The last month of 2025 delivered a series of storms that merited the distinction of being dubbed “atmospheric...

By Edward Ring

The Public Purpose Program: California’s Hidden Tax Driving Up Utility Bills

The Public Purpose Program: California’s Hidden Tax Driving Up Utility Bills

After several rate hikes implemented in the last few years alone, Californians are asking why their energy bills keep climbing when they use the same amount of electricity or gas. According to a 2023 report from the Transparency Foundation, residents of California pay up to 67% more for electricity and 30% more for natural gas...

By Mitchell G. Bahnsen

Will the Delta Pumps Operate at Capacity this Winter?

Will the Delta Pumps Operate at Capacity this Winter?

With another series of drenching storms about to hit California, now is a good time to ask what has become a perennial question: why can’t we harvest more of this massive runoff and reserve it for our farms and cities? California must periodically cope with multi-year droughts, but these droughts are usually preceded by years...

By Edward Ring

Will Advocates for More Water Supply Projects Find Unity?

Will Advocates for More Water Supply Projects Find Unity?

There’s only one way to restore reliable water allocations to farmers, avoid turning our cities into rationed “xeriscaped” heat islands, and cope with whatever the climate ultimately delivers. That’s to build more infrastructure to safely and sustainably produce millions of acre feet of new fresh water every year. There are many practical ways to accomplish...

By Edward Ring

Politically Viable Water Supply Projects

Politically Viable Water Supply Projects

A few years ago I was involved in an effort to qualify a ballot initiative, the “Water Infrastructure Funding Act.” While we failed to gather sufficient signatures to get it onto the November 2022 state ballot, if it had been approved by voters, water scarcity in California would have been eliminated forever. Unfortunately, certain provisions...

By Edward Ring