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The report also notes that the “economic analysis is insufficient to support informed decision-making.” It points to “unusually long evaluation timeframes and…price escalation assumptions that are highly implausible,” among many other factors.Menus Icon Bar Menu Icon Accordion Tabs Vertical Tabs Tab Headers Full Page Tabs Hover Tabs Top Navigation Responsive Topnav Split Navigation Navbar with Icons Search Menu Search Bar Fixed Sidebar Side Navigation Responsive Sidebar Fullscreen Navigation Off-Canvas Menu Hover Sidenav Buttons Sidebar with Icons Horizontal Scroll Menu Vertical Menu Bottom Navigation Responsive Bottom Nav Bottom Border Nav Links Right Aligned Menu Links Centered Menu Link Equal Width Menu Links Fixed Menu Slide Down Bar on Scroll Hide Navbar on Scroll Shrink Navbar on Scroll Sticky Navbar Navbar on Image Hover Dropdowns Click Dropdowns Cascading Dropdown Dropdown in Topnav Dropdown in Sidenav Resp Navbar Dropdown Subnavigation Menu Dropup Mega Menu Mobile Menu Curtain Menu Collapsed Sidebar Collapsed Sidepanel Pagination Breadcrumbs Button Group Vertical Button Group Sticky Social Bar Pill Navigation Responsive Header “We find the project to be substantially more costly than other options,” the report concludes. The overwhelming reasons against this project led eighteen of the 24 member agencies at the Water Authority to commission an independent report to analyze the findings of the RCS Study (Phase A).

Past politics and escalating rates continue to sour the relationship between the Water Authority and the Metropolitan.Įnter the Regional Conveyance System. For years, the Water Authority has seriously considered building a duplicate pipeline to gain independence and more control over fluctuating water prices. The Water Authority has among the highest rates in California. Our water supply is managed with the Water Authority and supplied via a system of pipelines by the Metropolitan.

According to experts on the energy-water nexus, as much as 19 percent of the state’s electricity consumption can be attributed to pumping, treating, collecting, and discharging water and wastewater. Today, San Diego imports more than 80 percent of our region’s water supply from the Colorado River or Northern California.
