California's
water agency has announced it may for the first time be unable to deliver water
to local agencies, amid a worsening drought.
Two-thirds
of state residents and 1m acres (404,500 hectares) of farmland get part or all
of their drinking and irrigation supplies from the agency.
A state-wide
drought was declared earlier this month, as the largest reservoirs sank to
record low levels.
Forecasters
have warned 2014 could be California's driest year on record.
The
extreme conditions have already caused a wildfire that destroyed homes in the
Los Angeles area.
Previous
extremely dry years led to catastrophic wildfire seasons in California in 2003
and 2007.
'Drought
is real'
It is the
first time in the water agency's history that it has predicted a so-called
"zero allocation", which will affect around 25m people.
State
governor Jerry Brown said the announcement was a "stark reminder that
California's drought is real".
He urged
residents to conserve water, suggesting they avoid flushing toilets
unnecessarily and to turn off the tap while shaving.
Meanwhile
a spokesman for the state's farming federation called the news "a terrible
blow".
The water
originates from the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta.
It is
delivered to local agencies via a vast network of reservoirs, pipelines,
aqueducts and pumping stations.
The 29
agencies that draw from the state's water-delivery system have other sources,
Associated Press reports, although these too have been badly hit. (BBC)
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