CFS News & Announcements

California Emergency Management Agency (Cal EMA) Issued Video about the March 2011 Storms14-May-2012

The California Emergency Management Agency (Cal EMA) recently issued a Youtube video about..

CFS Engineering Brings Civil Engineering and Land Surveying Expertise into Sonoma County30-Apr-2012

It is now official that CFS Engineering has expanded its operation into the North Bay with the o..

Capitola Village Flood: CFS Engineering Featured on ConsumerWatch CBS Channel 5 in San Francisco20-Oct-2011

The Capitola Flood is back in the news again thanks to Julie Watts, news anchor for Consum..

Buried Egyptian Pyramids and Other Archaeological Sites Found Using Satellite Imagery12-Oct-2011

Check out this report from the BBC: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-13522957 ..

Central Valley Flood Risk, A Nice Little Video22-Sep-2011

Have a look at the following, brought to you by our friends at Aquafornia (http://aquaforn..

CFS Engineering Joins Thumbtack30-Aug-2011

CFS Engineering has created a profile on Thumbtack. What is Thumbtack? Click the followi..

CORPS OF ENGINEERS AND THE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY: A POWER GRAB OVER WATERS AND WETLANDS24-Jun-2011

The US Army Corps of Engineers (Corps) and the Environmental Protection Agency..

Tahoe Snowpack and Damage to Structures21-Jun-2011

An interesting article about the 2010/2011 winter snowpack in the Tahoe basin and the resu..

Los Angeles Aquaduct -- A Slideshow17-Jun-2011

Here is a nice slideshow of the Los Angeles Aquaduct from its origin in the eastern Sierra..

Capitola Flood -- Who Is Responsible?09-Jun-2011

The Santa Cruz Sentinel published an article about the Capitola Flood today entitled, "Cause o..

Capitola Flood: Owners Having Difficulty With Insurance Claims23-Apr-2011

A local article about victims struggling with their insurance companies: http://www.sa..

Scotts Valley Landslide -- Nelson Road -- Video Footage of Slide in Action30-Mar-2011

This March 21 landslide in Scotts Valley has been all over the news. Thankfully nobody was injur..

Who Will Pay for Capitola Flood Damage Costs?29-Mar-2011

Check out this article from KGO-TV, Channel 7 in San Francisco. Click here (http://abclocal.go.c..

The Longest Home Run Ever Recorded17-Nov-2010

For those of you not quite over baseball fever this year...... Go Giants!!! Here's a little his..

State Water Project: A Brief Slideshow09-Nov-2010

Thanks to one of my favorite water related news blogs, Aquafornia, for supplying the public with ..

CFS ENGINEERING Joins Think Local First Coalition for Santa Cruz County08-Oct-2010

Think Local First! (http://www.thinklocalsantacruz.org/c/) We have tremendous resources in our ..

Suit Filed against CA SWRCB and DWR to Protect Delta Public Trust Fisheries07-Sep-2010

This is bound to be interesting, utilizing the public trust doctrine as a strategy to force the c..

Retracing the Sonoma-Napa county line15-May-2010

An interesting article about the re-tracement survey of the Napa Sonoma County line, plus a little b..

Interesting Boundary Dispute Story28-Apr-2010

An interesting story about a 250 year old boundary dispute back east: http://www.cbsnews.com/storie..

Nice Video Footage of a Recent Landslide in Southern California06-Apr-2010

Check out this footage of a landslide in San Dimas, California this past winter: (http://) ht..

Nice Video Footage of a Road Flooded and Washed Out06-Apr-2010

This is a nice example of a fairly large culvert flooded and resulting in the road being washed out ..

California Water/Delta Legislation Package Distilled22-Mar-2010

With all the politiacal psychobabble jamming up every imaginable viewpoint, some refreshing straight..

National Geographic Chimes In on California's Water System16-Mar-2010

Leave it to National Geographic Magazine to colorfully and concisely illustrate the state of Cal..

More Salmon Coming Back: Good News for Fish and Farms?15-Mar-2010

Check this out from www.sierra2thesea.com (http://www.sierra2thesea.com) Monday, Marc..

CH2M Hill study confirms vast scale of Cadiz aquifer system24-Feb-2010

ONTARIO, CALIF. — CH2M Hill has unveiled the findings of a comprehensive year-long study measuri..

Vote may delay water legislation23-Feb-2010

Feb 23, 2010 12:20 PM, By Forrest Laws, Farm Press Editorial Staff Many farmers and rancher..

Officials agree to remove California dam01-Feb-2010

MONTEREY COUNTY, CALIF. — The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) joined stat..

The Good Fight - Check Your Facts Regarding the Delta Water Wars16-Jan-2010

By Doug Lovell Editor's note: this article is best viewed at our website, where the Internet..

Surfrider Foundation abandons lawsuit challenging Carlsbad desalination project11-Jan-2010

“San Diego, CA – Poseidon Resources today announced it has been notified by the Surfrider Founda..

Utah Governor pulling back on water deal with Southern Nevada10-Jan-2010

By Patty Henetz The Salt Lake Tribune Updated: 01/08/2010 11:10:33 PM MST ..

Groundwater mining: American experience30-Dec-2009

T. N. Narasimhan Recent geophysical studies report large-scale groundwat..

Making Way for Salmon: Fish passage barriars removed from streams30-Dec-2009

By Eileen Ecklund In 2001, a small miracle occurred in a stream south of the city of Arcata: th..

U.S. EPA Directs Bay Area Wastewater Collection Systems to Protect San Francisco Bay from Sewage Dis22-Dec-2009

SAN FRANCISCO — The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) ordered seven municipal sewage co..

What's to Fallow: After years of drought, the legislature’s historic water deal is just the beginni07-Dec-2009

by Rich Ehisen | December 2009 This is the final story in a four-part series on water. Th..

Smelt Suit: Water users take their case to the courts06-Dec-2009

by Joanna Corman | December 2009 For nearly three decades, Westlands Water District recei..

Credit program could be key to regaining Tahoe's clarity04-Dec-2009

By Adam Jensen, Tahoe Daily Tribune SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif. — Alternative energy credits a..

Santa Cruz County won't see major benefits from state water package17-Nov-2009

By Kurtis Alexander, Santa Cruz Sentinal County residents will be ..

California finally passes water legislation10-Nov-2009

SACRAMENTO, CALIF. — After years of contentious debate between business, agricultural, wat..

Nevada, California Delegations Introduce Legislation to Preserve and Protect Lake Tahoe03-Nov-2009

Bill extends commitment to Lake Tahoe and the Tahoe Basin November 3, 2009 Washin..

Peripheral Vision: Can state and federal officials agree on comprehensive reform before it’s too la02-Nov-2009

by Rich Ehisen | November 2009 This is the third installment in a four-part series on wate..

Spending Water Like Money: when conservation alone can’t solve the state’s water problems10-Oct-2009

by Rich Ehisen | photo by Jayson Carpenter | October 2009 This is the second installment i..

California seeks $4.5 billion for high-speed rail24-Sep-2009

SACRAMENTO, CALIF. — The California High-Speed Rail Authority unanimously approved an applicatio..

Hydrating the System: The state’s water woes and its faltering economy10-Sep-2009

by Rich Ehisen | photo by Jayson Carpenter | September 2009 Most recognized California as ..

Southern California desalination project receives final approval01-Sep-2009

REDONDO BEACH, Calif. - West Basin Municipal Water District's Ocean-Water Desalination Demonstra..

Dam Compromise: A water battle is heating up — and leaving pundits parched15-Aug-2008

by Rich Ehisen | August 2008 Few things have played as large a role in shaping California ..

Groundwater mining: American experience

30-Dec-2009

 

T. N. Narasimhan

 

Recent geophysical studies report large-scale groundwater mining in the Indus-Ganga Basin. India can gain useful insights by examining American experience in adapting to unacceptable groundwater overdraft.

In September, Virendra Tiwari of the National Geophysical Research Institute, Hyderabad, reported in Geophysical Research Letters that approximately 54 cubic km of water is being mined annually from a 2.7-million sq.km area extending from Delhi in the west to Bangladesh in the east. Using similar satellite-borne gravimetry, a research group from NASA reported an annual groundwater depletion of about 18 cubic km from Rajasthan, Punjab, and Haryana. For a number of years, alarming declines in water levels due to groundwater overdraft have been reported from many parts of peninsular India. Clearly, groundwater over-exploitation poses a threat to India’s economic future.

Water-well drilling technology and use of deep-well turbine pumps were introduced in India during the 1950s by the Exploratory Tubewells Organisation, forerunner of the Central Groundwater Board. As part of this programme, scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey trained the first batch of India’s earth scientists in groundwater hydrology. Over the past five decades, groundwater has unquestionably played a major role in India’s agricultural production, and provided domestic water supplies to rural communities throughout the nation. Hand in hand, vigorous groundwater use has also led to unsustainable overdraft. This problem of overdraft, however, is not limited to India.

In the United States, many large groundwater basins have suffered and continue to experience non-renewable depletion of storage. It is instructive to examine the nature of groundwater overdraft in the U.S. and understand how the country is adapting to meet the emerging crisis.

During the second half of the 19th century, as America expanded westwards, the new settlers discovered large, deep groundwater basins throughout the country. In the arid western parts, aquifer systems in these basins contained vast quantities of water accumulated during wet climatic eras of the geological past. These basins sparked large-scale irrigated agriculture and the settlement of large metropolitan areas.

At the turn of the 20th century, the deep-well turbine was invented so that large quantities of water could be lifted from these aquifers from great depths. The turbine pump, aided by the birth of hydroelectric power and AC motors during the 1890s, made unprecedented quantities of groundwater available for human consumption. Over the past century, groundwater has been exploited vigorously in the U.S. for municipal, irrigation, and industrial purposes. In parallel, the Geological Survey has accumulated valuable data on the impact of this exploitation on groundwater availability.

For a glimpse into this overdraft, we may consider the following five basins: the Dakota Aquifer System (1,71,000 sq. km.), the Atlantic Coastal Plain System (44,000 sq. km.), California’s San Joaquin Valley (9,730 sq. km), the High Plains Aquifer System extending from South Dakota to Texas (443,000 sq. km), and South Central Arizona (8,070 sq. km). Groundwater production from these systems significantly exceeds the ability of ambient natural precipitation to replenish. During the 20th century, non-renewable water mined from these systems amounted to over 365 cubic km. Unintended consequences of groundwater mining included continuous decline in water levels, drying up of perennial streams that depend on groundwater for base flow, demise of deep-rooted phreatophytes, land subsidence and ground fissuring. Evidence is overwhelming that irrigated agriculture and industries that rely on groundwater from these systems cannot be sustained for long.

During the 19th century and early 20th century, water laws were formulated in the U.S. to maximise economic growth through incentives for exploitation. Appropriative water rights were granted to users. Groundwater was treated as private property. During the second half of the 20th century, the traditional mindset of exploitation and growth found itself confronted by uncertainty of resource availability and interconnectedness of surface water and groundwater. Adapting to the changing reality gave rise to a serious social challenge.

Those who own water rights and have commercial interests like to exercise their rights to groundwater as private property, citing economic benefits to society. Others who are concerned about long-term resource integrity for the present and future generations like to see integrated, sustainable management of surface water and groundwater. Society is in a state of transition, continuously adjusting to these two opposing forces.

Legally, private rights to groundwater continue. Whereas navigable surface water is subject to public trust, groundwater remains outside its scope. In practice, as groundwater productivity declines, water levels fall, and ecological impacts become obvious, regulatory statutes are invoked to identify critically affected areas and regulate groundwater production.

Social transition is characterised by intense debate among groundwater users, groundwater professionals, environmentalists, NGOs, and academia on the future of sustainable groundwater management. Information on groundwater is openly disseminated by State and federal agencies. Private foundations dedicated to water education are active in providing material on groundwater to citizens and to children in schools. Although progress may be slow in arresting overdraft, there are encouraging signs that sustainable groundwater management will eventually materialise out of sheer necessity.

The latest findings of groundwater mining in the Indus-Ganga basin suggest that India’s water use is already on the threshold of exceeding availability. The deep-well pump, a technological marvel when it was invented, has also created an unforeseen problem. To overcome the problem, society must show resilience and adapt.

In a democracy, such resilience is inherent in constructive, open debate among informed citizenry that enables sacrifices and compromises. In this regard, America’s groundwater experience, and the way the country is making efforts to adapt technologically and socially to groundwater mining, should be of value to India’s own efforts to achieve sustainable adaptation.

(T.N. Narasimhan is Professor Emeritus, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, University of California at Berkeley. tnnarasimhan@LBL.gov)

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