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Farms that Help Wildlife

By Jeffrey Mount, Nathaniel Seavy, John Eadie, Peter Moyle

Some crops that generate low revenue for farmers may have high environmental value, particularly for birds and fish.

blog post

Managing Tough Trade-offs in the Delta

By Ellen Hanak, Jeffrey Mount

New data illustrate the tough trade-offs California faces in managing water in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.

blog post

Drought Watch: Water for the Environment

By Jeffrey Mount, Emma Freeman

This is part of a continuing series on the impact of the drought.

Most of what we call "environmental" water is simply too remote for people to use—or is actually reused for irrigation, drinking water, or other human benefits.

blog post

Drought Watch: Improving Environmental Management

By Ellen Hanak, Jeffrey Mount

This is part of a continuing series on the impact of the drought.

California needs to modernize how we manage water for the environment during droughts, which pose a broad ecological challenge to California’s fish and wildlife.

blog post

Drought Watch: Saving the Fish

By Jeffrey Mount

This is part of a continuing series on the impact of the drought.

In a recent California WaterBlog post, Peter Moyle of the University of California, Davis—a frequent collaborator on PPIC projects—highlights an issue not much discussed in the context of this drought: we ignore fish and wildlife at our peril.

blog post

Drought Watch: A Better Way to Manage Water for Fish

By Ellen Hanak, Jeffrey Mount

This is part of a continuing series on the impact of the drought.

As California’s drought wears on, state and federal regulators will be under increasing pressure to loosen environmental standards that protect native fish and other wildlife.

Report

Fixing the Delta: How Will We Pay for It?

By Dean Misczynski

This report examines the question of how to pay for urgently needed investments in the Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta. For years, stakeholders have been at odds over beneficiary financing (charging those who use the water). But recent federal intervention to save endangered fish species and the decline of state and federal funding sources may finally break the impasse. This report situates the beneficiary payment debate in historical, legal, and political context. It also explores how this kind of financing might work for several “big ticket” items: water conveyance facilities, storage reservoirs, environmental mitigation, and levee improvements.

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