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Overview
The Inland Feeder project
is a high-capacity water delivery system designed to increase
Southern California's water supply reliability in the face
of future weather pattern uncertainties, while minimizing
the impact on the San Francisco Bay/Sacramento-San Joaquin
Delta environment in northern California. The massive water
project will take advantage of large volumes of water when
available from northern California, depositing it in surface
storage reservoirs, such as Diamond Valley Lake, and local
groundwater basins for use during dry periods and emergencies.
The project also will improve the quality of the Southland's
drinking water by allowing more uniform blending of better
quality water from the state project with Colorado River
supplies, which have a higher mineral content.
Project In Brief
Cost: $1.2 billion
Estimated Completion Date: 2007
Length: Nearly 44 miles of large-diameter
pipelines and tunnels, stretching from the foothills of
the San Bernardino Mountains to the Colorado River Aqueduct
in the Riverside County community of San Jacinto
Benefits
- Increases water supply reliability in the
face of future weather pattern uncertainties
- More than doubles Metropolitan's water delivery
capacity from the east branch of the State Water Project
- Improves the quality of the Southland's
drinking water
- Minimizes impact on Bay/Delta environment
- Helps replenish local groundwater basins
Water Source
- East branch of the California State Water
Project from Lake Silverwood
Environmental Mitigation
- Added more than 75 acres to existing holdings
of California
- Department of Fish and Game as part
of the San Jacinto Wildlife Area
- More than 800 acres in Day Canyon and City
Creek areas in the San Bernardino Mountains

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