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The following 7 projects were found for "Water Resources Support"
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The CALFED Bay- Delta Program is a joint state-federal process charged with developing long-term solutions to problems of water quality, fish and wildlife, water supply reliability, and vulnerability of Delta levees and channels to natural disasters within the San Francisco Bay/Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta Estuary in California.
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Semitropic Water Storage District near Bakersfield encompasses approximately 225,000 acres, of which over 135,000 acres are developed to irrigated agriculture.
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GEI was retained by the Colorado Water Conservation Board (CWCB) for the completion of a reconnaissance-level study to identify and evaluate surface water storage and management options in the Lower South Platte River Basin.
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The 10.5 Mw Mystic Lake Hydroelectric license is scheduled to expire in 2009. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) initiated the new Integrated Licensing Process (ILP) in 2003 as the owner, PPL Montana, began its relicensing plans. GEI has been assisting PPL Montana with the ILP since the start.
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Bookman-Edmonston (B-E), a division of GEI Consultants, Inc., performed a hydraulic analysis of the portion of the California State Water Project that provides water to users in the North San Francisco Bay area known as the North Bay Aqueduct (NBA).
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Water temperatures in the lower Columbia River are known to exceed temperatures of 20 degrees C as frequently as 15 percent of the days of the year. Whether this is a natural condition or one exacerbated by the construction of dams is not well understood. As temperatures exceed this level, they pose potential harm to threatened and endangered salmonids. GEI was retained to review the EPA Thermal Model.
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GEI assisted PPL Montana in development of upstream fish passage facilities at the Thompson Falls Hydroelectric Project. This 92.6 MW project has full-year daily average streamflows ranging from 9800 cfs (2001) to 28,000 cfs (1997), and peak annual discharge can exceed 100,000 cfs. Maximum static head is 62 feet.
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