Groundwater Sustainability and Land Subsidence in California’s Central Valley

Author:

Faunt Claudia C.1ORCID,Traum Jonathan A.2,Boyce Scott E.1ORCID,Seymour Whitney A.1ORCID,Jachens Elizabeth R.1,Brandt Justin T.2,Sneed Michelle3ORCID,Bond Sandra2,Marcelli Marina F.1

Affiliation:

1. San Diego Projects Office, California Water Science Center, U.S. Geological Survey, 4165 Spruance Road, Suite 200, San Diego, CA 92101, USA

2. Sacramento Projects Office, California Water Science Center, U.S. Geological Survey, 6000 J Street, Placer Hall, Sacramento, CA 95819, USA

3. Office of Quality Assurance, U.S. Geological Survey, 6000 J Street, Placer Hall, Sacramento, CA 95819, USA

Abstract

The Central Valley of California is one of the most prolific agricultural regions in the world. Agriculture is reliant on the conjunctive use of surface-water and groundwater. The lack of available surface-water and land-use changes have led to pumping-induced groundwater-level and storage declines, land subsidence, changes to streamflow and the environment, and the degradation of water quality. As a result, in part, the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA) was developed. An examination of the components of SGMA and contextualizing regional model applications within the SGMA framework was undertaken to better understand and quantify many of the components of SGMA. Specifically, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) updated the Central Valley Hydrologic Model (CVHM) to assess hydrologic system responses to climatic variation, surface-water availability, land-use changes, and groundwater pumping. MODFLOW-OWHM has been enhanced to simulate the timing of land subsidence and attribute its inelastic and elastic portions. In addition to extending CVHM through 2019, the new version, CVHM2, includes several enhancements as follows: managed aquifer recharge (MAR), pumping with multi-aquifer wells, inflows from ungauged watersheds, and more detailed water-balance subregions, streamflow network, diversions, tile drains, land use, aquifer properties, and groundwater level and land subsidence observations. Combined with historical approximations, CVHM2 estimates approximately 158 km3 of storage loss in the Central Valley from pre-development to 2019. About 15% of the total storage loss is permanent loss of storage from subsidence that has caused damage to infrastructure. Climate extremes will likely complicate the efforts of water managers to store more water in the ground. CVHM2 can provide data in the form of aggregated input datasets, simulate climatic variations and changes, land-use changes or water management scenarios, and resulting changes in groundwater levels, storage, and land subsidence to assist decision-makers in the conjunctive management of water supplies.

Funder

U.S. Geological Survey, Bureau of Reclamation

San Luis and Delta–Mendota Water Authority

California Department of Water Resources

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference122 articles.

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2. California Department of Water Resources (2020). California’s Groundwater Update 2020 (Bulletin 118), California Department of Water Resources.

3. A High-Resolution Global-Scale Groundwater Model;Sutanudjaja;Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci.,2015

4. Non-Renewable Groundwater Use and Groundwater Depletion: A Review;Bierkens;Environ. Res. Lett.,2019

5. Faunt, C.C. (2009). Groundwater Availability of the Central Valley Aquifer, California, U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1766.

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