Expansion Project for Salton Sea Conservation Initiated in California
The project will now be expanded by 750 acres, bringing the total to nearly 5,000 acres.
California and federal officials broke ground on Tuesday to begin the expansion of restoration efforts at the Salton Sea, one of the largest lakes in the state, according to the U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI).
The Salton Sea, a saline lake located in Imperial County in southern California, has shrunk in recent years due to declining water levels, leaving an exposed lakebed that worsens air quality and impacts the habitat for fish and wildlife.
The project aims to create a network of ponds and wetlands at the Salton Sea site to provide habitats for fish and birds while reducing dust to improve air quality for the communities in the region.
“California is making major strides on restoration efforts at the Salton Sea, and we’re expanding this critical work to create habitat on hundreds more acres and help improve air quality in neighboring communities,” Gov. Gavin Newsom said in an Oct. 15 statement.
Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.), one of the officials at the groundbreaking ceremony, said that federal funding could enable the expansion of the restoration work at the Salton Sea to around 8,000 acres in the future.
Decades-long drought conditions and modern agricultural development in the surrounding valleys have reduced freshwater inflows while making the lake a sink for agricultural runoff, including artificial fertilizers and pesticides.
California secured a $70 million grant from the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation through the Inflation Reduction Act in December last year, enabling the expansion of the lake’s restoration efforts.
David Lam and Cynthia Cai contributed to this report.