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hatrack

(64,774 posts)
Wed Mar 18, 2026, 07:50 AM 7 hrs ago

Update: Corpus Christi Could Face Emergency Water Cutbacks As Early As May; No Plan As To How Cutbacks Would Work

City officials in Corpus Christi on Tuesday released modeling that showed emergency cuts to water demand could be required as soon as May as reservoir levels continue to decline. That means the region’s complex of refineries and chemical plants could face disruptions of their water supply sooner than previously predicted.

At a regularly scheduled City Council meeting at City Hall, Nick Winkelmann, Corpus Christi Water’s chief operating officer, presented five scenarios depicting varying success rates for the city’s emergency water projects. They showed a “Level 1 Water Emergency” beginning in May, in October or not at all. Previous city modeling had forecast the emergency, which requires a 25 percent reduction in all water use, in November, equivalent to about 30 million gallons per day (MGD) of water. Officials did not offer any clarity on how water curtailment might be implemented in the region.

EDIT

Instead, the council on Tuesday approved hundreds of millions of dollars of funding for a last-ditch emergency groundwater import project from the Evangeline Aquifer that still doesn’t have permits. “It’s the only thing right now that will keep us out of a Level 1 Water Emergency,” Corpus Christi City Manager Peter Zanoni told the council. “We’re taking a calculated risk and continuing the design and we’re going to start building the project in about five weeks without the drilling permits.”

In a best-case scenario, the project will start producing 4 MGD in November, Zanoni said. In the worst case, the city could invest in building the project, only for its permits to be litigated in state administrative court for two more years. “I think we have to plan for the worst-case scenario,” said Corpus Christi Mayor Paulette Guajardo. “We pray to God that this comes through, but if it doesn’t, we’ve got to be able to know what’s going to come.”

EDIT

https://insideclimatenews.org/news/17032026/corpus-christi-cuts-timeline-to-disaster-as-abbott-issues-emergency-orders/

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Update: Corpus Christi Could Face Emergency Water Cutbacks As Early As May; No Plan As To How Cutbacks Would Work (Original Post) hatrack 7 hrs ago OP
I thought some places were going to collect urine and use it on crops bucolic_frolic 6 hrs ago #1
Texass. Corpus has known about this for at least 15 years. mwmisses4289 6 hrs ago #2

bucolic_frolic

(54,928 posts)
1. I thought some places were going to collect urine and use it on crops
Wed Mar 18, 2026, 08:16 AM
6 hrs ago

or filter it for crops. There are nutrients in there.

mwmisses4289

(3,969 posts)
2. Texass. Corpus has known about this for at least 15 years.
Wed Mar 18, 2026, 08:28 AM
6 hrs ago

They will decide of course, that any water restrictions will fall on the non business and small businesses of the area.
Say goodbye to the rest of your spring break tourism and nevermind your summer visitors.
The one thing that might have helped- a desalination plant- but they and their voters kept screaming about how expensive that is. Now they have an even more expensive problem on their hands.
Makes me wonder about the other areas that have a lot of chemical/refining plants along the coast. Are they also facing a water crisis?

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