Summary
Bureau of Reclamation Central Valley Project: Infrastructure and Water Deliveries
Central Valley Project (CVP)
The CVP, owned and operated by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, covers approximately 20,000 square miles in California, from Redding in the north to Bakersfield in the south. In an average year, the CVP delivers approximately 5 million acre-feet (AF) of water to its contractors, including agricultural (Ag) contractors operating on some of the nation's most valuable farmland, municipal and industrial (M&I) users, and state and federal wildlife refuges, among others. Some of these deliveries go to contractors north of the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers' Delta (NOD); other water is "exported" (via pumps and conveyance infrastructure) south of the Delta (SOD).
CVP Water Contractor Type
NOD Settlement
NOD Ag/M&I
Wetland Habitat/Refuge
SOD Exchange
Friant Division
SOD Ag/M&I
In Delta
American River M&I
SOD Settlement
Eastside
Federal Dam
State Dam
Local Government/Utility Dam
Pumps/Pumping Stations
CVP Conveyance
State Aqueduct
Local Aqueduct
River Names
Only dams with storage over 500,000 acre-feet.
State Water Project (SWP)
A separate project operated by the State of California, the SWP, coordinates its operations with the federal government and delivers about 70% of its water to M&I users.
Selected CVP Contractor
Allocations, 2003-2024 Annual allocations as a % of maximum contract allocations
Water Rights Contractors
Reclamation first makes CVP water available for delivery to contractors with water rights that predate construction of the CVP, including NOD (Sacramento River) Settlement Contractors and SOD (San Joaquin River) Exchange Contractors.
NOD Settlement Contractors2,115,620 AF
SOD Exchange Contractors875,623 AF
Other Agricultural (Ag) Water Contracts
Other contract types (e.g., water service, repayment contracts) account for most of the CVP's remaining supplies. These deliveries have a lower priority than water rights contractors and wildlife refuges. This category includes Westlands Water District, the country's largest irrigation district.
NOD Ag468,990 AF
SOD Ag1,951,217 AF
Central Valley Wildlife Refuges
California's Central Valley is home to 19 state and federal wildlife refuges that receive water from the CVP pursuant to a 1992 law (P.L. 102-575).
NOD National Wildlife Refuges151,250 AF
SOD National Wildlife Refuges 271,001 AF
Friant Division Contractors
Friant Division Contractors receive San Joaquin River water that is stored behind Friant Dam, in Millerton Lake. This water is delivered through the Friant-Kern and Madera Canals.
Friant Division 800,000 AF
Maximum allocations (as of 2023) AF: acre-feet Ag: Agricultural NOD: North-of-Delta SOD: South-of-Delta
For more information, see CRS Report R45342, Central Valley Project: Issues and Legislation. Map sources: California State Geoportal, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, and ESRI. Information as of October 8, 2024. Prepared by Charles V. Stern, Specialist in Natural Resources Policy; Mari Lee, Visual Information Specialist; and Cassandra Higgins, Geospatial Information Systems Analyst.
Document ID: IG10065