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Much of ​California's incredible new 'windfall' of underground water may be unusable

California drought lake water
Justin Sullivan/Getty

Now that California is officially in its fifth year of a severe drought, you might think that the recent discovery of an incredible amount of water deep underground would be cause for celebration.

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But don't break out the Sonoma sparkling wine just yet — it's not all good news.

Researchers at Stanford University have indeed struck water tripling the known usable groundwater resources in the state. Add in newly discovered potential sources of drinking water, and you get enough water to fill Lake Huron.

All that water isn't in one single underground reservoir, but scattered throughout California's Central Valley, which supplies a quarter of the US food supply and has been devastated by the ongoing drought.

drought dead almond trees california
These used to be almonds. Lucy Nicholson/REUTERS

The water is deeper than where scientists tend to look. Underground stores of water, called aquifers, are generally most accessible if they're less than 1,000 feet from the surface. The new aquifers are 1,000 to 3,000 feet underground and usually much saltier than water close to the surface.

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This makes access difficult and costly — but potentially worth it, depending on how dire the drought becomes.

But there's another problem with this cache of the new "liquid gold": A ton of it has been contaminated by oil and gas extraction in the valley.

Environmental scientists and study co-author Rob Jackson said that the result was "surprising" in a video Stanford released to explain the find.

"The oil and gas industry is essentially the only industry that's allowed to inject chemicals into drinking water," Jackson said. "We should talk about whether that's in the best interest, especially in states like California, where water is so precious."

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no diving bridge california drought
A sign from wetter times warns people not to dive from a bridge over the Kern River, which has been dried up by water diversion projects and little rain, on February 4, 2014 in Bakersfield, California. Now in its third straight year of unprecedented drought, California is experiencing its driest year on record, dating back 119 years. Grasslands that support cattle have dried up, forcing ranchers to feed them expensive supplemental hay to keep them from starving or to sell at least some of their herds, and farmers are struggling with diminishing crop water and what to plant or whether to tear out permanent crops which use water year-round such, as almond trees. About 17 rural communities could run out of drinking water within several weeks and politicians are are pushing to undo laws that protect several endangered species David McNew/Getty

At least 30% of the sites with usable water (which could be drinking water if treated for human consumption) are currently being used in oil and gas operations, especially in the case of hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking."

In order to to extract natural gas, fracking operators inject a mix of water, chemicals, and oftentimes sand into bedrock, fracturing it and freeing the gas trapped inside.

The technique is coming under increasing scrutiny, in part because companies aren't required to tell anyonenot even the government — what's in their fracking cocktail.

fracking central california
"IDK" — The government. Rob Jackson/Stanford University

Jackson worries that the remnants of potentially harmful chemicals could be left behind in the water or even the soil, where it can seep into the aquifer. He also worries about wastewater injection wells, where companies inject leftover fluids directly into the ground.

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Also alarming is the fact that Central Valley is already sinking by about 2 inches a month as a result of current groundwater extraction. Pulling more water out of the ground won't help.

In a press release, Jackson was careful to note that just because an aquifer is used in extraction operations, that doesn't mean it is contaminated. But as mega-droughts are projected to become more and more common in western states, it’s essential that we pay closer attention to how these operations might taint supplies.

In a press release Jackson was careful to note that, just because groundwater is underneath or nearby, an extraction operation doesn't mean it is contaminated, but that the risks are great enough that we should be paying closer attention — especially as mega-droughts are projected to become more and more common in western states.

"We might need to use this water in a decade," co-author Mary Kang said in the release, "so it's definitely worth protecting.

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"The oil and gas industry is essentially the only industry that's allowed to inject chemicals into drinking water," Jackson said in Stanford's video release. "We should talk about whether that's in the best interest, especially in states like California, where water is so precious."

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