U.S. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar Wednesday announced that the Bureau of Reclamation is providing $2.7 million in funding for studies in California, Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oregon, Texas and Utah through the U.S. Department of the Interior's WaterSMART Program.

A total of $1,944,000 will go for studying the Klamath River Basin, which straddles the boundary between California and Oregon, covering approximately 12,100 square miles.

According to an Interior Department press release, recent negotiations and resolutions require ongoing cooperation and participation of federal, tribal, state and local governments along with fishing, environmental and other organizations.

”The basin study will collaboratively develop a basin wide perspective of the climate change-related risks for supply and demand that may affect agriculture, anadromous and resident fish, recreation, municipal and domestic water supplies, hydropower and flood control facilities,” Interior said. “This effort will assess potential impacts of climate change on snowpack and precipitation, timing and quality of runoff, groundwater recharge and discharge and any increases in demand and/or reservoir evaporation; and will develop structural and non-structural options to address current and projected imbalances in the basin.”

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Oregon

Basin Plan of Study, Klamath River, California and Oregon  
Reclamation Funding: $925,000 Total Funding: $1,944,000
The Klamath River Basin straddles the boundary between California and Oregon, covering approximately 12,100 square miles. The basin is affected by a variety of water supply and demand imbalances which are expected to increase with projected climate change. Recent negotiations and resolutions require ongoing cooperation and participation of federal, tribal, state and local government along with fishing, environmental and other organizations. The basin study will collaboratively develop a basin-wide perspective of the climate change related risks for supply and demand that may affect agriculture, anadromous and resident fish, recreation, municipal and domestic water supplies, hydropower and flood control facilities. This effort will assess potential impacts of climate change on snowpack and precipitation, timing and quality of runoff, groundwater recharge and discharge and any increases in demand and/or reservoir evaporation; and will develop structural and non-structural options to address current and projected imbalances in the basin.