TITLE:
California Wildfires & Water Crisis: How Coastal Reservoirs Can Prevent the Next Disaster
AUTHORS:
Shu-Qing Yang, Yueying Zhang
KEYWORDS:
Coastal Reservoirs, Floodwater and Runoff, Environmental Impacts, Wildfire and Droughts, Desalination Plants
JOURNAL NAME:
Journal of Water Resource and Protection,
Vol.18 No.6,
June
10,
2026
ABSTRACT: California is not running out of water, but water is running to the sea (50%), while cities (10%) and farmers (40%) struggle with shortages, wildfires, and groundwater depletion. Traditional land-based water infrastructure—such as dams, aqueducts, and groundwater pumping—is no longer sufficient to meet the challenges posed by climate change, population growth, and ecological mandates. This article proposes a paradigm shift: a sea-based water solution built around coastal reservoirs (CRs) and seabed pipelines. These technologies capture excess floodwater near the coast before it mixes with saltwater and transfer it efficiently to high-demand urban areas using low-impact pipelines—similar in design to the Nord Stream system. Drawing lessons from successful implementations in Shanghai, Singapore, and Hong Kong SAR, we present a comparative evaluation showing that sea-based systems offer greater water yield, lower costs, and minimal environmental disruption compared to California’s proposed $20 billion Delta tunnel. The paper outlines the scientific, economic, and environmental rationale for integrating coastal reservoirs into California’s water strategy. With global precedents proving their feasibility, CRs represent a low-cost, high-resilience solution for securing California’s water future.