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NEW LEGISLATION TO FORCE THE STATE TO REVIEW THE CADIZ WATER PUMPING PLAN

A bill introduced Wednesday in the California Legislature aims to protect water resources in the state’s deserts. Assembly member Laura Friedman (D-Glendale) introduced Assembly Bill 1000, known as the California Desert Protection Act, to strengthen safeguards for desert groundwater so that water transfers don’t negatively impact natural or cultural resources. David Lamfrom, the California deserts director for the National Parks Conservation Association, says the bill came at the right time because the Mojave Desert faces urgent threats.
“Those include the Cadiz project, which stands to pump at least 16 billion gallons of water a year and to ship it out of the California desert. And we’re also concerned about the impact that having, really, a loophole in water policy, what that could mean for the California desert moving forward,” Lamfrom said.
The Trump administration recently paved the way for the Cadiz Water Project to move forward without a federal environmental review. The project to extract and export water from Mojave Desert aquifers and sell the water to Southern Californians has raised serious concerns that it could deplete desert springs vital to wildlife there.
Frazier Haney, the conservation director for the Mojave Desert Land Trust based in Joshua Tree, says the Cadiz project faced an uphill battle during the Obama administration but has found a clearer path to approval under the new president. He points to Donald Trump’s nomination of David Berhardt, a lobbyist for Cadiz, for the number two position in the Department of the Interior as one of the president’s ties to the project. “There are deep financial ties to people that Donald Trump has nominated to his Cabinet and the Cadiz water-pumping project. So, it’s troubling that an administration with financial ties to a project could be pushing a project along.”
Lamfrom says even by Cadiz’s calculations, its water extraction project isn’t sustainable. He says if the federal government won’t provide better oversight of this project, California should.
“It’s vital that the state of California step up and make sure that the science is actually good and that we understand exactly what those impacts will be because there’s a lot at stake here.”
The bill will be heard in the Senate Natural Resources and Water Committee next Tuesday, July 11.


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