This evening, I learned that the long-awaited benefit-cost analysis for the Delta Conveyance Facility (DCF) is being released tomorrow morning. DWR put out an FAQ in advance of the release last week, but it didn't include any of the questions below - so perhaps someone who is invited can ask them directly. Dr. Sunding did these analyses in the 2010s for the WaterFix, including an analysis of a single-tunnel option. His old analysis of a single-tunnel WaterFix suggests the current single-tunnel DCF would fail his own benefit-cost analysis, as I explained in the past
here and
here, because the DCF water supply benefits are lower and the costs higher than in 2018. Perhaps this is why we have had to wait so long for this update, it must take a lot of time and creativity to figure out a way to increase the benefits. (Note: This first paragraph was revised 5/16 9:30 AM, the morning after the original post.)
This report is being released over five years after Governor Newsom directed DWR to switch to a single-tunnel plan, and nearly two years after DWR released the details of its preferred project design in the Draft EIR. The Final EIR was released last year.
• Should benefit-cost analysis be conducted before or after an alternative is selected?
When WaterFix considered switching to a single-tunnel, staged implementation, you produced a benefit-cost analysis for a single-tunnel alternative in a few months.
• Why did it take so long to release this report?
In your WaterFix benefit-cost analyses in the 2010s, you did not use the same no-tunnel baseline and project description as the EIR, and you did not include any environmental costs.
• In this analysis of the DCF, are you being consistent with the EIR baseline and project description?
• If not following the EIR. Why?
• Does this analysis include environmental costs of the tunnel?
None of the previous analyses you did for the WaterFix were ever submitted to the State Water Board or the Delta Stewardship Council as evidence that the WaterFix was in the public interest.
• Why not?
• Will this analysis be added to the current petition before the State Board?
In your WaterFix benefit-cost analysis, you found that expected economic benefits from earthquake risk reduction due to the tunnels were relatively small.
• Are your current findings the same? If not, why?
• Considering the fatalities, infrastructure and property loss from mass levee failure, is a water tunnel the best way for the State to address this risk?
• Have you done benefit-cost analysis comparing levee investments to a water tunnel to address earthquakes and flood risk?
The Central Valley Project, which was supposed to pay 45% of the cost of WaterFix, has already decided not to participate in the DCF due to cost. Several agriculture serving State Water Project agencies are also declining to participate due to costs.
• What does your analysis say about whether the remaining agricultural water suppliers can afford their share of the DCF?
• Does your analysis predict that agricultural water agencies will stick with the project, or does it predict that more agricultural water users will drop out of the project?
Metropolitan Water District’s sales have declined in recent years, and population has declined in its service area. Its 10-year financial projection forecasts rates will increase at 3-times the expected rate of inflation over the next decade with flat or declining water sales.
• Does your analysis project increasing or decreasing water demand for MWD?
• Have you analyzed its ratepayers and member agencies capacity to pay for the tunnel?
In your other work, you have written a lot about how uncertainty reduces the benefits of investing in a project, including regulatory uncertainty. There is a lot of uncertainty about how the DCF will be operated, including uncertainty about environmental effects. Adaptive management is part of the plan.
• Did you reduce your estimates of benefits to account for uncertainty?
• Did you account for uncertainty in the estimates of cost?
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Last week, DWR released
an FAQ document that reserved its only call-out for 4 bullet points describing “benefits of the Delta Conveyance Project will not be quantified in the benefit-cost analysis and yet are also compelling for decisions-makers.” These comments and questions are regarding these four bullet points in the FAQ.
Groundwater supplies. In previous studies of WaterFix benefits and costs, Dr. Sunding explicitly accounted for constrained ground water supplies and limits on groundwater pumping, it significantly increased the value of water supplies to farms. It seems likely that DWR’s statement about this in its FAQ is false and these benefits are quantified in the benefit-cost analysis.
• Are constraints on groundwater included in the valuation of water supply benefits?
Job creation. You have estimated jobs created from tunnel construction, which DWR calls a benefit in its FAQ document describing your report.
• If the costs increased, wouldn’t the jobs increase too?
• Have you ever said that jobs are a measure of costs not benefits with respect to benefit-cost analysis?
• If funds were spent on tunnel alternatives instead of DCF, how many jobs would be created?
• When higher water rates reduce household income, how many jobs are lost?
• For every dollar spent, do tunnel alternatives create more or fewer jobs than the tunnel?
Increased Operational Flexibility: Like groundwater benefits, this could be included in the benefit estimates for water supply and water quality. This issue does raise questions about whether DWR intends to actually operate the tunnels as described in the EIR. Regarding tunnel operations, the EIR states that “Shifting from south Delta intakes to proposed north Delta intakes has trade-offs and is not expected…”
• Do your benefit estimates reflect flexibility from the project operations in the EIR?
Delta Community Benefits Program: The program is speculative and undefined. Funding is expected to be minimal. Is funding for this undefined program included in the cost estimate? If not, it shouldn’t be mentioned here.
[5/19 Note: I have seen the report now and it is a lot different than the WaterFix reports, and thus it answered quite a few of these questions. Most importantly, it doesn't change the project description from the EIR, the biggest problem with the old WaterFix reports. But the new analysis does some new things that are also very questionable. I'll leave this post up as the blog is a personal journal, but note the date, 5/15. There will be more analysis, some of it on this blog.]