Document Details

Solar Energy and Groundwater in the San Joaquin Valley

Andrew Ayres, Annabelle Rosser, Ellen Hanak, Alvar Escriva-Bou, Darcy Wheeles, Mitchelle De Leon, Curtis Seymour, Abigail K. Hart | October 26th, 2022


The Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA) requires groundwater users to bring their basins into balance over the next two decades. In the San Joaquin Valley, this will likely mean taking more than 500,000 acres of agricultural land out of intensive irrigated production. Local and regional economies could be stressed as a result, with some regular employment opportunities in agriculture disappearing and public revenues declining if lands are not put to new uses. As landowners and newly formed groundwater agencies tackle the groundwater deficits in their areas, utility-scale solar development—already an attractive option for landowners owning property with or without water rights—could offer an opportunity to keep lands that exit irrigated production economically productive. Moreover, development could provide multiple benefits by helping to supplement habitat and mitigate dust generation on transitioning lands. However, the expansion of solar hinges on whether state-level energy system planning processes—in conjunction with local land use planning—can address the transmission challenges that threaten the region’s promise as a solar power hub.

Keywords

Central Valley, climate change, Groundwater Exchange, land use, Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA), water and energy