Recent late storms have improved both collected water capacity and future water through snowpack and snowmelt.
Amid rising concerns about California’s water future, the fifth largest reservoir in the state is primed for expansion. A coalition of water agencies, from Silicon Valley to Fresno, has agreed to ...
California's snowpack has hit a 25-year milestone, reaching 96 percent of the historical average. The accumulation of snow in ...
California's snowpack in the Sierra Nevada mountains measures 96% of average. It's the third straight year the state has had ...
The water level in Shasta Lake, California's largest man-made reservoir, is currently at 86.3 percent of total capacity as of ...
California snowpack numbers on April 1 provide critical information for water managers as Sierra snowpack historically peaks and begins melting, filling reservoirs.
The water in California’s mountain snowpack is just shy of average as spring begins, but a winter storm set to hit the Sierra ...
It also comes as nearly all of California's reservoirs are above their historic capacity after two wet winters followed a punishing drought that forced severe cutbacks in water usage in cities and ...
But thanks to abundant precipitation up north, the state has ample water in reservoirs and a strong snowpack. The Trump administration has taken a keen interest in California’s water situation ...
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