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Santa Ana 2020 Urban Water Management Plan <br />arcadis.com <br />6-21 <br />MWDOC’s imported water sales to OCWD since FY 1990-91 averages approximately 31,200 AF per <br />year. Recently, due to low Santa Ana River flows as a result of low precipitation and increased use along <br />the river, OCWD has needed to purchase more imported replenishment water per year than the average <br />of 31,200 AFY over the last 25 years (this does not include water amounts from MET’s Conjunctive Use <br />Program (CUP) or its Cyclic Storage Account). However, with the emergence of PFAS affecting <br />groundwater production, the need to purchase imported water has been temporary suspended. <br />Until PFAS treatment is in place for most groundwater producers in the region, imported replenishment <br />water will be significantly reduced. <br />6.3.7 MET Conjunctive Use Program / Cyclic Storage Program with OCWD <br />Since 2004, OCWD, MWDOC, and certain groundwater producers have participated in MET’s CUP. <br />This program allows for the storage of MET water in the OC Basin. The existing MET program provides <br />storage up to 66,000 AF of water in the OC Basin to be pumped by participating producers in place of <br />receiving imported supplies during water shortage events in exchange for MET’s contribution to <br />improvements in basin management facilities and an annual administrative fee. These improvements <br />include eight new groundwater production wells, improvements to the seawater intrusion barrier, and <br />construction of the Diemer Bypass Pipeline. The water is accounted for via the CUP program <br />administered by the wholesale agencies and is controlled by MET such that it can be withdrawn over a <br />three-year time period (OCWD, 2020). As of 2021, the CUP has not been in use since 2014. The CUP <br />contract ends in 2028. <br />The Cyclic Storage account is an alternative storage account with MET. However, unlike the CUP <br />program, OCWD controls when the water is used. The Cyclic Water Storage Program allows MET to <br />store water in a local groundwater basin during surplus conditions, where MET has limited space in its <br />regional storage locations. Once the water is stored via direct delivery or In-lieu the groundwater agency <br />has the ability to purchase this water at a future date or over a 5-year period. <br />6.3.8 Overdraft Conditions <br />Annual groundwater basin overdraft, as defined in OCWD's Act, is the quantity by which production of <br />groundwater supplies exceeds natural replenishment of groundwater supplies during a water year. <br />This difference between extraction and replenishment can be estimated by determining the change in <br />volume of groundwater in storage that would have occurred had supplemental water not been used for <br />any groundwater recharge purpose, including seawater intrusion protection, advanced water reclamation, <br />and the in-Lieu Program. <br />The annual analysis of basin storage change and accumulated overdraft for water year 2019-20 has been <br />completed. Based on the three-layer methodology, an accumulated overdraft of 200,000 AF was <br />calculated for the water year ending June 30, 2020. The accumulated overdraft for the water year ending <br />June 30, 2019 was 236,000 AF, which was also calculated using the three-layer storage method. <br />Therefore, an annual increase of 36,000 AF in stored groundwater was calculated as the difference <br />between the June 2019 and June 2020 accumulated overdrafts (OCWD, 2021).