President Donald Trump recently ordered the release of massive amounts of water from two California dams, and now local farmers are scrambling to preserve precious freshwater resources needed for dry summer months.
The Los Angeles Times reported Friday that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers — acting on Trump’s orders — released water from the Terminus Dam at Lake Kaweah and the Schafer Dam at Lake Success, which are both in Tulare County in the San Joaquin Valley. Whereas water was originally flowing from the Terminus Dam at 57 cubic feet per second (cfs), it’s now reportedly flowing at more than 1,500 cfs. The flow from Lake Success went from 105 cfas to 990 cfs as of Friday morning.
In a post to his official X account, Trump tweeted a “photo of beautiful water flow that I just opened in California,” writing: “Today, 1.6 billion gallons and, in 3 days, it will be 5.2 billion gallons.” He suggested that the water release would help officials in the Golden State fight wildfires in Southern California.
“Everybody should be happy about this long fought Victory!” he tweeted. “I only wish they listened to me six years ago – There would have been no fire!”
In response to an inquiry from the Los Angeles Times, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers spokesperson Gene Pawlik confirmed that the release of water from the dams was done “to ensure California has water available to respond to the wildfires.” He added that the water release was “consistent with the direction” of Trump’s January 24 executive order announcing “emergency measures to provide water resources in California.”
However, water managers in Tulare County told Bakersfield, California-based news site SJV Water — which covers water issues in the San Joaquin Valley – that there are multiple physical and legal barriers that prevent the valley’s water from getting to Southern California. SJV Water reported that the water would have to be “pumped at great expense” across the valley to the California Aqueduct, where it would still need to travel hundreds of miles to make it to the Los Angeles area.
“Every drop belongs to someone,” Kaweah River Watermaster Victor Hernandez told SJV Water. “The reservoir may belong to the federal government, but the water is ours. If someone’s playing political games with this water, it’s wrong.”
The two dams are considered important reservoirs of water for farmers in the San Joaquin Valley, which is known for its “Citrus Belt” that produced more than four million tons of citrus fruits — particularly Mandarin, Navel and Valencia oranges, along with grapefruits and lemons — in the 2020-2021 season alone. Tulare County water manager Dan Vink said the release of water from the dams could make irrigation difficult.
“A decision to take summer water from local farmers and dump it out of these reservoirs shows a complete lack of understanding of how the system works and sets a very dangerous precedent,” Vink said. “This decision was clearly made by someone with no understanding of the system or the impacts that come from knee-jerk political actions.”
Climate scientist Peter Gleick — who specializes in water issues — lamented on Bluesky that water resources farmers had been “relying on” were effectively “thrown away” by the Trump administration all for the sale of “a photo op & a bragging media post.”
Oh shit, he outsmarted himself. Again.