[env-trinity] Grape and nut drying up Golden State's water holes

Dan Bacher danielbacher at fishsniffer.com
Tue May 3 18:09:29 PDT 2016


  http://patrickporgansblog.blogspot.com/2016/05/grape-and-nut-glut-drying-up-golden.html

Grape and nut glut drying up Golden State’s watering holes Part I
California water officials and mainstream media assertions this epic  
drought caused socioeconomic and financial disaster to state’s economy  
is not supported by the facts published in government reports.

Three years into the drought and the Golden State Gross Domestic  
Product (GDP) reached a record of $2.31 trillion, agricultural  
revenues higher than ever, statewide building permits doubled, and  
more water-guzzling permanent crops planted. (Latest published GDP  
figures.)

IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 2 May 2016
Contact Patrick Porgans, Solutionist Porgans/Associates porgansinc at sbcglobal.net 
  (916) 833-8734

Californians inundated by a plethora of mainstream-media bytes  
predicting Draconian consequence from this "epic drought" water  
experts and public-relations firms branded the worst in 500-years are  
perplexed by drought-flood news accounts aired simultaneously.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/01/30/california-drought-effects-500-years_n_4647539.html

Meanwhile, government officials, water contractors, and mainstream  
media, whine about the dire impacts of the so-called worst drought in  
California since the 1500s, the record, show they're reaping windfall  
profits.

Public records attest that the Golden State's economy, tax revenue  
stream, and Gross Domestic Product (GDP) reached all-time highs during  
four years of drought. In the third year of the drought, the state's  
GDP was a record-breaker.

"In 2014, the State’s GDP was ranked as the 7th or 8th largest economy  
in the world, based on traditional measurements [just below France and  
above Brazil]. On June 10 [2015], the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis  
released its preliminary estimates of state gross domestic product  
(GDP) for 2014, as we described in a blog post last week. California's  
2014 GDP— the value of all goods and services produced here—was  
estimated at $2.31 trillion. There are different estimates of  
countries' GDP."http://www.lao.ca.gov/LAOEconTax/Article/Detail/90
That number is the latest number published by the government (www.bea.gov 
)

Epic drought generates the largest budget in State’s history: Last  
month, Governor Jerry Brown proposed the largest budget in  
California's history; $170 billion, of which, $120 billion comes from  
the State's General Fund revenue stream; with additional billions  
earmarked by Brown to the "Rainy Day" fund. This surplus of funds is  
collected tax revenue; almost 70 percent of the $120 billion is  
derived from personal income tax. Today, the Rainy Day Fund is at 37  
percent of its constitutional target (10 percent of General Fund tax  
revenues) amounts to $12 billion to be held in reserve! The Budget  
proposes to bring the Rainy Day Fund to a balance of 65 percent. ttp:// 
ebudget.ca.gov/FullBudgetSummary.pdf]

This March, government and water industry officials responded to the  
good news by extending mandatory water cutback! California’s economy  
has expanded during the past seven years.

Governor’s Budget Summary 2016-2017, Introduction. "The economy is  
finishing its seventh year of expansion, already two years longer than  
the average recovery. While the timing is uncertain, the next  
recession is getting closer, and the state must begin to plan for it.  
If new ongoing commitments are made now, then the severity of the cuts  
will be far greater – even devastating – when the recession begins.  
Without question, the best way to protect against future cuts is to  
build up the state’s Rainy Day Fund," according to Gov. Brown.

Californians face a multi-dimensional conundrum; an extended drought,  
which imposed first-time ever statewide mandatory water cutbacks while  
portions of the state are under siege from flooding resulting from the  
remnant of a fading El Nino. Factors compounded by a massive appeal by  
the water industry requesting State Water Resources Control Board  
(SWRCB) members to end the drought. In the interim, the Brown  
Administration recently reinstituted signage posted on California  
highways stating: Extreme Drought – Conserve water!

Water condition above average: The truth about the state's water  
conditions is immersed in a stupor of shifting forecasts, as is the  
winter weather, unpredictable and changing. On 1 February a report  
depicting statewide precipitation at 115 percent and 120 percent for  
the North Coast Region for this time of year, according to Department  
of Water Resources (DWR) personnel.1 The very next day 2 February the  
SWRCB voted to extend drought emergency regulation, purportedly to  
ensure mandatory water conservation through October 2016.2
http://saveourwater.com/blog-posts/conservation-extended/

In early March through April Californians were stunned as officials  
dump floodwaters from Folsom Dam, on the American River, which had  
received 120 percent of average precipitation. Water was also being  
dumped at other major reservoirs in the north state.http://www.sacbee.com/news/state/california/water-and-drought/article67772672.html

It is estimated that more than one million acre-feet of water were  
dumped from state reservoirs, enough to provide half of the water  
needs of those 19 million customers receive annually from the  
Metropolitan Water District of Southern California.

The March snow survey, conducted by DWR personnel showed snowpack at  
locations ranged from low 90s to over 100 percent of average. http://www.water.ca.gov/waterconditions/waterconditions.cfm

Findings contained in a Forensic Accounting based on the public record  
and direct intercommunication with water officials and regulatory  
personnel, most of whom putatively accepted the 500-year conjecture,  
in the absences of verifiable peer-reviewed data. If the intrinsic  
shortcomings of those assertions were even theoretically plausible,  
assuming that this is the worst drought in California, it might have  
possibly occurred in central and southern California; however, the  
public record does not support those assertions in the water-rich  
north state. http://www.theterranews.com/content/?p=66539

Forensic Accounts of previous drought events are the subject of a  
series of article that prompted responses from the California Farm  
Water Coalition.

The California Farm Water Coalition has this response to Patrick  
Porgans & Lloyd Carter’s post, Wolf Cries – Howling About Drought –  
All Wet – No More Doubts Officials Exaggerated Severity of Drought:  
"Coalition viewpoint…These numbers provide a clear picture of the  
effect that governmental regulations and the drought, during the past  
four years, had on water users who rely on deliveries of water through  
the Delta. As indicated by the bloggers, the water years in the  
Sacramento Valley from 2006-2009 averaged 16.39 million acre-feet  
(MAF), which is a 60% increase, or 6 MAF more than during 1989-1992." http://www.farmwater.org/Current-News/ 
  http://www.watereducation.org/aquafornia-news/california-farm-water-coalition-responds-porganscarter-commentary-howling-about

Ironically, the doomsday public-relations campaign precipitated an  
astonishing downpour of wealth to state and federal water contractors  
that already receive publicly-subsidized water. Water districts and  
land-gentry billionaires reaped an abundant harvest of public give- 
away funds. Unfortunately, their profits come at the expense and to  
the demise of urban water users; taxpayers, the state General Fund,  
and Public Trust Resources (water, fish, and wildlife).3

Abundant Harvest: Contrary to mainstream media reports, agricultural  
profits reached all-time high in the fourth year of drought. "Even  
though the 2014 crop year coincides with the third consecutive year of  
unprecedented drought, the innovation and resilience of California’s  
agricultural community continue to ensure the State’s agricultural  
abundance. Despite the tremendous challenges in 2014, the farmgate  
value of the state’s 76,400 farms and ranches was a record $54  
billion. Of the $54 billion, over $21 billion was attributed to  
California’s agricultural exports." http://cdec.water.ca.gov/cgi-progs/iodir?s=b120

Building permits doubled: In the second and third year of the drought,  
building permits doubled statewide.
http://www/census.gpv/construction/bps/txt/tb2u2013.txt http://www/census.gpv/construction/bps/txt/tb2u2012.txt
http://www.dof.ca.gov/HTML/FS_DATA/LatestEconData?FS_Construction.htm

The Governor's Proclamation and the Emergency Drought Regulations  
relieve government water project operators of their obligation to  
comply with the provisions of the California Environmental Quality Act  
(CEQA). It also sanctions the reduction or suspension of water quality  
standards and objectives contained in the San Francisco Bay-  
Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta Estuary Water Quality Control Plan;  
enacted to protect Delta farmers, water diverters, and aquatic, avian  
and terrestrial species.

The SWRCB issued emergency drought regulation that targets mandatory  
cutbacks by urban-residential users, while subversively exempting the  
agricultural industry that reportedly applies an estimated 80 percent  
of the state's developed water supply annually. Instead, Board members  
left it up to the agricultural industry to reduce and conserve water.

Gross agricultural revenues represent about two (2) percent of the  
State's GDP. Additional revenue is generated by the processing and  
distribution of the products produced. Thus for every dollar of value  
added in that sector, there is an additional $1.27 added to the state  
economy.
  http://aic.ucdavis.edu/publications/moca/moca_current/moca09/moca09chapter5.pdf

During this current drought, it is estimated that $3 billion of  
borrowed public funds have already been given away for drought  
"relief" programs. That money comes from the sale of State issued  
General Obligation (G.O.) bonds, which, repayment is backed by the  
full-faith and credit of California. A list of General Obligation  
Bonds authorized and issued by the state can be found here.http://www.treasurer.ca.gov/bonds/debt/04/authorized.pdf

For every dollar of G.O. bonds sold, it cost a dollar in interest; it  
will cost $6 billion to repay, with revenues derived the State's  
General Fund. "It must never be forgotten, however, that 69.5 percent  
of our General Fund revenues come from the volatile personal income  
tax which, as history shows us, drops precipitously in time of  
recession — an event not too far off given the historic pattern of the  
ten recessions that have occurred since 1945. During a moderate  
recession, revenue losses to the General Fund will easily total $55  
billion over three years"; Gov.'s Budget Summary 2016-2017.11 [Note:  
Rainy Day Fund is used to assure bond investors G.O. debt is covered. http://www.latimes.com/politics/la-pol-sac-jerry-brown-releases-state-budget-20160107-story.html

California land of fruits and nuts exporting water to foreign markets

  "California, which produces much of the country's water-guzzling  
fruits [nuts] and vegetables, is in year four of a major drought, and  
almonds, its No. 1 export, have become a symbol of the state's heavy  
water consumption. Mature almond trees in the Southern Sacramento  
Valley use 41 to 44 inches of water on average per year, according to  
the University of California at Davis. Trees in drier southern San  
Joaquin Valley use 50 to 54 inches. In California, an acre supports  
about 124 almond trees. Last year, and acre produced around 2,270  
pounds of almonds, for a ratio of about 502 gallons of water per pound  
of nuts." (The math works out to equals 3.49 acre-feet of water per  
acre of almonds planted.) Total amount of water applied averages out  
to 3.55 MAF annually.
www.wsj.com/articles/the-numbers-behind-agricultural-water-use-1434726353

The amount of water required to sustain the growth of these almonds is  
1.4 MAF more than the 2.1 MAF the Metropolitan Water District (MWD) of  
Southern California provides annually. (One acre-foot equals about  
326,000 gallons; an average California household uses between one-half  
and one acre-foot of water per year for indoor and outdoor use.)http://www.watereducation.org/general-information/whats-acre-foot

Almond crop bonanza – money grows on trees: In the year 2000, there  
was 610,000 acre of almond planted, valued at $666,487,000 for the  
crop. California's 2014 almond acreage is estimated at 1,020,000  
acres, up 5 percent from the 2013 acreage of 970,000, according to a  
recent survey conducted by the National Agricultural Statistics  
Service. Of the total acreage for 2014, 870,000 acres were bearing,  
and 150,000 acres were nonbearing, crop valued at $6,464,500,000.http://www.nass.usda.gov/Statistics_by_StateCalifornia/Publications/fruits_and_Nuts/201505almpd.pdf

The subjective production for the 2015 almond crop is 1.85 billion  
pounds, according to a survey conducted by the National Statistic  
Service. https://www.nass.usda.gov/Statistics_by_State/California/Publications/Fruits_and_Nuts/201505almpd.pdf

CBS and Fox News "erred" scenes of almond orchards ripped out due to a  
lack of water while other experts predicted California would run out  
of water in 2016. Public records do not support their assertions and  
the orchard depicted in their stories failed to "air" the scene where  
those same drought-stricken lands were replanted with a new variety of  
almonds. http://www.cbsnews.com/news/depleting-the-water As indicated  
by USDA's Graph California Almond Bearing Acreage has continued to  
expand before and since the onset of this drought, in 2011.
http://www.nass.usda.gov/Statistics_by_State/California/Publications/Fruits_and_Nuts/201505almpd.pdf

The SWRCB was advised of almond acreage expansion years ago; it took  
no action to curtail the use of the public's water, and growers went  
nuts.http://www.waterboards.ca.gov/waterrightsissues/programs/drought/docs/workshops/comments/patrick_porgans.pdf


There was so much of a glut in the almond market that the price of  
almonds dropped precipitously. After prices for almonds climbed to a  
record $4 per pound in 2014, farmers across California began replacing  
their cheaper crops with the nut, causing a huge increase in supply.  
Now, the bubble has popped. Since late 2014, according to The  
Washington Post, almond prices have fallen by around 25%.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2016/01/29/too-many-almonds/

More grapes and other permanent crops also planted while building  
permits doubled statewide in 2013-2014.
http://www.dof.ca.gov/HTML/FS_DATA/LatestEconData/FS_Construction.htm

A major challenge facings taxpaying Californians, is if they can  
afford to export water in the form of surplus fruits and nuts to  
countries such as China, which is not required to pay an import tax.  
In the interim, the California dream appears to be fading into the  
midst impairing their quality of life and cost of living as the forces  
behind water exploitation usurp others water and property rights.

Endnotes

1 California Department of Water Resources, Bulletin 120, Water  
Conditions in California, February 1, 2016, p. 2.
2 State Water Resource Control Board’s Fact Sheet, Extending the  
Emergency Water Conservation Regulation, 9 February 2016.
3 Joseph L. Sax, The Public Trust Doctrine In Natural Resource Law:  
Effective Judicial Intervention, The Historical Background, Michigan  
Law Review, [Vol. 68:471]

Part  II: Water officials usurp property/water rights under the guise  
drastic action to protect endangered fish
Part III: California’s drought-flood water management crises - why it  
pays - source of funds

About the author: Patrick Porgans is a Solutionist, and for the past  
40 years serving clients and as a de facto public trustee, assisting  
and or compelling government officials to perform their functions in a  
manner consistent with the law. Porgans authored more than 80 Fact- 
Finding reports on water- and water-related issues in the West. He  
contributed to Mark Reisner's Cadillac Desert publication. He is the  
author of "Truth De-Code-It", which provides insight on how wealthy  
land-gentry billionaires are using the tax base, the state's credit  
rating, General Fund, General Obligation Bonds, and publicly-owned  
natural resources to amass and sustain ill-gain fortunes. (Truth De- 
Code-It focuses on ways to mutually coexist and to empower ourselves  
to make change, one person, one day at a time. The FACT SHEET can be  
viewed at www.planetarysolutionaries.org or by emailing noblewaters at yahoo.com 
  This report was made possible by the joint commitment of New-Old  
Worlds Wholistically Emerging (NOWWE) and Patrick Porgans/Associates  
as a public service. For more articles and FACT SHEETS, Google Patrick  
Porgans water. 
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