L.A.'s water lifeline faces unprecedented flood threat. The battle to prevent calamity
More than a month after heavy storms eroded a section of the Los Angeles Aqueduct, work crews are still scrambling to complete repairs and shore up flood defenses in the face of a weeklong heat wave that threatens to trigger widespread snowmelt in the Sierra Nevada.
Were doing as much as we can, as quickly as possible, said Paul Liu, of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power. Our crews are working 12-hour shifts.
Historic snowpack levels in the Eastern Sierra are expected to melt into runoff that is 225% of normal, which translates to about 326 billion gallons of water that will need to be managed, DWP officials said.
And while a typical runoff season in the region can last from May to June, this years could push through to August, said Anselmo Collins, senior assistant general manager of the DWPs water system.
The DWP has already begun emptying reservoirs to create more storage space for the roughly 130 billion gallons of water expected to make its way to Los Angeles this spring and summer via the aqueduct potentially enough to meet 80% of L.A.s annual demand.
https://www.latimes.com/environment/story/2023-04-27/flood-fears-los-angeles-aqueduct-rising-temperatures