Laserfiche WebLink
90 Part I California Water <br /> Figure 2.9 <br /> Gross per capita urban water use is now declining <br /> 400 <br /> Inland <br /> 350 ,.•••••.••• <br /> -a ••.• �� .... Inland <br /> CL 300 •' (without the <br /> ,7) 300- River) <br /> `v <br /> 250- — California <br /> c -- Coastal <br /> N 200 — — <br /> o <br /> 150 <br /> 100- <br /> 1960 1967 1972 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 <br /> SOURCE:Authors'calculations using data from California Water Plan Update(California Department of Water Resources,various years). <br /> NOTES:Water use is shown in gallons per capita per day(gpcd).Outdoor water use is much higher in inland areas because of <br /> hotter temperatures and larger lot sizes(Hanak and Davis 2006).The low-desert Colorado River region,including areas such as <br /> Palm Springs,has especially high per capita use from golf-based tourism. <br /> higher-value crops have considerably increased the real dollar value per acre- <br /> foot of irrigation water.12 <br /> Although comparable trends in environmental water allocations are not <br /> available,it is likely that new environmental water dedications play some role <br /> in the tightening of overall supplies available for agricultural and urban use in <br /> recent decades.13 During this time,California's population and economy have <br /> both increased,reflecting a substantial decoupling of economic prosperity from <br /> the availability of abundant water supplies.Having more water is no longer as <br /> fundamentally important as when California's economy was based largely on <br /> irrigated agriculture or mining. <br /> The declining trends in gross agricultural and urban water use may have <br /> accelerated in the late 2000s, as a multiyear drought and new restrictions on <br /> 12. From 1972 to 1995,the real economic value of output per acre-foot of applied irrigation water increased by <br /> 19.3 percent when using the Gross Domestic Product deflator to measure inflation,and by 92.6 percent when deflated <br /> using U.S.Department of Agriculture index of prices received by farmers(Brunke,Howitt,and Sumner 2005). <br /> 13. For example,since 1993,the federal Central Valley Project Improvement Act has restricted supplies to some <br /> agricultural contractors south of the Delta(Chapter 2).Overall pumping through the Delta continued to increase <br /> during the late 1990s and early 2000 as State Water Project contractors increased their draw(Figure 2.4),but much of <br /> the additional water went to storage for dry years in groundwater banks and Metropolitan Water District of Southern <br /> California's new surface reservoir,Diamond Valley Lake.Since the 1990s,Los Angeles has cut its diversions from the <br /> Mono Lake and Owens Valley region in response to environmental rulings. <br />