Exploring Vulnerabilities in the California Water System under the Late
Renaissance Megadrought and Climate Change
Abstract
California faces cycles of drought and flooding that are projected to
intensify, but these extremes may impact water users across the state
differently due to the region’s natural hydroclimate variability and
complex institutional framework governing water deliveries. To assess
these risks, this study introduces a novel exploratory modeling
framework informed by paleo and climate-change based scenarios to better
understand how impacts propagate through California’s complex water
system. A stochastic weather generator, conditioned on tree-ring data,
produces a large ensemble of daily weather sequences conditioned on
drought and flood conditions under the Late Renaissance Megadrought
period (1550-1580 CE). Regional climate changes are applied to this
weather data and drive hydrologic projections for the Sacramento, San
Joaquin, and Tulare Basins. The resulting streamflow ensembles are used
in an exploratory stress test using the California Food-Energy-Water
System model (CALFEWS), a highly resolved, daily model of water storage
and conveyance throughout California. Results show that megadrought
conditions lead to unprecedented reductions in inflows and storage at
major California reservoirs. Both junior and senior water rights holders
experience multi-year periods of curtailed water deliveries and complete
drawdowns of groundwater assets. When megadrought dynamics are combined
with climate change, risks for unprecedented depletion of reservoir
storage and sustained curtailment of water deliveries across multiple
years emerge. Asymmetries in risk emerge depending on water source,
rights, and access to groundwater banks.