Cadiz Inc. has announced it has completed acquisition of an existing 220-mile pipeline that could carry water from its property in the Mojave Desert to California's Central Valley, near Bakersfield. The pipeline was purchased from El Paso Natural Gas for $19 million.
The 30-inch steel pipeline was originally part of a 1,250-mile oil pipeline that ran from Texas to California. It was constructed in 1985 and is located within a 50-foot-wide corridor, adjacent to existing roads, railroads, and other pipelines, according to Cadiz. A functioning pipeline could make the project more viable, threatening the springs and seeps of the eastern Mojave Desert, and the wildlife that depends upon them.
Mojave Watch has reached out to our sources for comment. The press release, issued July 1, 2021, is as follows:
Cadiz Completes Acquisition of 220-Mile Pipeline Asset
Company finalizes transaction with El Paso Natural Gas to acquire existing pipeline segment.
Pipeline positioned to convey water between California communities and diversify state's water infrastructure.
LOS ANGELES, July 1, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Cadiz Inc. ("the Company,"NASDAQ: CDZI) is pleased to announce today that it completed the acquisition of an existing 220-mile pipeline, the Cadiz "Northern Pipeline," making final payment of $19 Million to El Paso Natural Gas ("EPNG"). As California continues to address supply inequalities, infrastructure challenges and intensifying drought, the Northern Pipeline can provide new water conveyance access and supplement California's water infrastructure along an underserved, growing east-west route with additional regulatory approvals.
The Northern Pipeline extends southeast from California's Central Valley near Bakersfield and terminates at the Company's Cadiz Ranch agricultural operations. The pipeline crosses underserved and disadvantaged communities as well as existing water infrastructure including the State Water Project, Los Angeles Aqueduct, and the Mojave River Pipeline. The existing 30" steel pipeline has the design capacity to convey up to 30,000 AFY transferred between communities along the route and can bring others together across California through water exchanges.
"Cadiz is deeply committed to enhancing California's water transportation network to improve water access for underserved communities," said Scott Slater, Cadiz CEO & President. "For more than a decade we have worked to identify opportunities to put existing pipelines to work delivering water to California communities who desperately need access and look forward to continuing to execute on this vision with this unique pipeline asset."
Since Cadiz began the process of acquiring the Northern Pipeline in 2011, California's systemic water shortages have worsened, with disproportionate impacts being borne by disadvantaged communities, and it has become an important public policy issue for the State. More than 1 million Californians now lack access to clean, safe, reliable water particularly in state-designated disadvantaged communities, such as the areas accessible to the Northern Pipeline route.
"Californians in disadvantaged communities continue to suffer disproportionality from unreliable access to water," said Jose Barrera, Deputy State Director of California LULAC. "California needs innovative solutions to this challenge, and we look forward to working with Cadiz and other leaders in the state to continue finding sustainable ways to help, including recycling existing infrastructure to allow trading and better integration of disadvantaged communities into the state system."
"Our existing infrastructure and water supply cannot reliably serve all communities, particularly working-class communities that have grown and developed since the State's systems were first built," said Jon P. Preciado, Business Manager, Southern California District Council of Laborers. "Retrofitting existing infrastructure to improve access to water is a step in the right direction in ensuring all communities have affordable water for their families."
The 30" steel Northern Pipeline was originally part of a 1,250-mile oil pipeline stretching from Texas to California constructed in 1985 by Plains All American Pipeline Company ("AAPL"). It is located within a 50-foot-wide corridor with few surface features adjacent to existing roads, railroads, and other pipelines.
With the purchase of the Northern Pipeline, Cadiz has cemented its presence in the water conveyance market and has diversified its business opportunities. The pipeline offers an opportunity to move water between parties with access to the route.
In December 2020, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management assigned to Cadiz EPNG's existing right-of-way for the pipeline and granted a separate right-of-way for the route that authorized water as an approved substance to be conveyed in the pipeline. Any commencement of water conveyance through the Northern Pipeline will comply with all appliable local, state, and federal laws.
To learn more about the Northern Pipeline please visit our website at www.cadizinc.com .
About Cadiz Inc.
Founded in 1983, Cadiz Inc. (NASDAQ: CDZI) is a California business dedicated to sustainable water and agricultural projects. We own 70 square miles of property with significant water resources in Southern California and are the largest agricultural operation in San Bernardino, California, where we have sustainably farmed since the 1980s. We are also partnering with public water agencies to implement the Cadiz Water Project, which was named a Top 10 Infrastructure Project that over two phases will create a new water supply for approximately 400,000 people and make available up to 1 million acre-feet of new groundwater storage capacity for the region. Guided by a holistic land management plan, we are dedicated to pursuing sustainable projects and practicing responsible stewardship of our land, water and agricultural resources. For more information, please visit www.cadizinc.com .
SOURCE Cadiz Inc.
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is going to happen again