Project Delivery

Birds flying at Salton Sea.

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Aided by input from community members, local leaders and interested groups, California state agencies are focused on implementing projects as part of the Salton Sea Management Program’s 10-year plan. The plan calls for construction of habitat restoration and dust suppression on 30,000 acres of exposed lakebed and areas that will be exposed by 2028.

The Species Conservation Habitat (SCH) Project is the state’s first large-scale project to reduce exposed lakebed and create environmental habitat. Following initial onsite work in 2020, the state’s design-build contractors, Kiewit Infrastructure West Co., began construction in 2021 on the $206.5 million project located at the southern end of the Salton Sea on both sides of the New River.

Aerial Map of Projects completed at the Salton Sea in 2020

Projects completed at the Salton Sea in 2020.

The SCH, enabled by land access and water use agreements with the Imperial Irrigation District, will create a network of ponds with islands and areas of varying water depths to provide important fish and bird habitat and suppress dust emissions to improve regional air quality as the Salton Sea recedes.

It is anticipated that the project will create as many as 3,000 jobs over the course of construction.
In addition to launching the SCH, the SSMP team completed approximately 755 acres of temporary dust suppression projects at the southern end of the Salton Sea in 2020 as an interim proactive measure to treat areas of exposed lakebed due to dropping water levels.

Aerial Map of Projects in progress and potential future projects under consideration at the Salton Sea

Projects in progress and potential future projects under consideration at the Salton Sea.

The SSMP team shared its near-term plans for interim projects to help control dust with the release of the Dust Suppression Action Plan in July 2020. The plan is a guidance document that outlines 9,800 acres of project planning areas on exposed lakebed around the Salton Sea, identifies potential dust suppression concepts, and describes the steps needed to transition from concept to on-the-ground implementation over the next few years.

Since the state is not a significant landowner around the Salton Sea, collaboration with various land-owning entities is critical to the SSMP team’s ability to implement projects. Land-access agreements and permits must be secured before soil testing or construction work begins. As a result, the SSMP is prioritizing work to secure land access in areas with the highest emissivity potential. These projects will help control dust and limit Sea-related impacts on air quality for communities such as Salton City, Bombay Beach and North Shore. Projects are in the planning stage at six sites for which land access is expected shortly: Clubhouse, Tule Wash, San Felipe Fan, Bombay Beach and Bombay Beach West, and North Shore.

Salton Sea Monitoring Implementation Plan

Developed in collaboration with the SSMP Science Committee, the Monitoring Implementation Plan (MIP) is a regional-scale monitoring plan for the Salton Sea ecosystem. It describes monitoring activities to measure conditions of water, air quality, land cover, biological resources, and socioeconomics. The MIP provides a framework for future project-scale monitoring plans and identifies and prioritizes filling of existing data gaps. It also promotes practices to best store, manage, and make monitoring data publicly available in a timely manner.

Salton Sea Monitoring Implementation Plan

Plan de Implementación de Monitoreo de Salton Sea

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