Business

State Water Project to Increase Expected 2023 Deliveries

SACRAMENTO – Gov. Gavin Newsom issued the following statement today after the state announced that it will boost deliveries to 29 public water agencies serving 27 million Californians.    

“Thanks to the water captured and stored from recent storms, the state is increasing deliveries to local agencies that support two-thirds of Californians – good news for communities and farms in the Bay Area, San Joaquin Valley and Southern California,” said Gov. Newsom. “We’ll keep pushing to modernize our water infrastructure to take advantage of these winter storms and prepare communities for the climate-driven extremes of wet and dry ahead.” 

  • Following atmospheric rivers and extreme weather that helped fill reservoirs and dramatically increase the Sierra Nevada snowpack, the Department of Water Resources now expects to deliver 30% of requested water supplies – or 1.27 million acre-feet – in 2023, up from the initial 5% announced on Dec. 1.
  • The State Water Project’s two largest reservoirs (Oroville and San Luis) have gained a combined 1.62 million acre-feet of water in storage – roughly enough to provide water to 5.6 million households for a year

With an above-average snowpack in the Sierra Nevada mountains, the state is cautiously optimistic that by early summer, there will be enough water stored in our reservoirs and aquifers to help relieve the worst effects of drought. While recent storms have been impressive, two months remain in the wet season and California could see a return to warm and dry conditions. Difficult conditions still exist in the Colorado River watershed, and many Californians rely on groundwater wells, which take much longer to recover from drought.  

DWR will conduct snow surveys on Feb. 1, March 1, April 1 and May 1 and may further update the allocation as the water supply outlook becomes clearer with the new data.

California traditionally receives half its rain and snow by the end of January. Water managers will reassess conditions monthly throughout the winter and spring. Starting in February, the assessments will incorporate snowpack data and runoff forecasts.

Reporters Desk

Recent Posts

Queen Mary 2 and the Historic Queen Mary will Reunite for a Royal Rendezvous – 20 Years Since Last Meeting

The public is invited to see this royal rendezvous from the decks of the Queen…

4 days ago

Arts Council for Long Beach Honors Griselda Suarez’s Legacy as Executive Director

  After ten years of transformative leadership, Griselda Suarez will step down as executive director…

4 days ago

Port of Los Angeles Awards Record $1.85 Million in Community Grants

LOS ANGELES – Jan. 29, 2026 – The Los Angeles Board of Harbor Commissioners Jan.…

4 days ago

Thousands of SoCal Kaiser Pharmacy and Lab Workers to Begin Unfair Labor Practice Strike Feb. 9

UFCW Kaiser employees will launch their ULP strike to raise their concerns at the same…

4 days ago

Newsom Spotlights Major Anduril Investment in SoCal which Includes AI Weapons Development

At that time, OpenAI maintained that the partnership is focused on defensive measures to protect…

4 days ago

Christopher Chase Named Director of Cargo Marketing at Port of Los Angeles

  LOS ANGELES –  2026 – Maritime and cruise industry veteran Christopher Chase Jan. 29…

4 days ago