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SB1387 • 2026

long-term storage accounts; credits; percentage

SB1387 - long-term storage accounts; credits; percentage

Passed Legislature

This bill passed both chambers and reached final enrollment, even if later executive action is not shown here.

Sponsor
Priya Sundareshan
Last action
2026-01-28
Official status
Senate second read
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The bill summary and text do not provide specific details on the impact of the amendments outside Arizona.

Long-Term Storage Accounts for Water Credits

This bill amends rules for crediting stored water to long-term storage accounts, adjusting percentages based on specific conditions.

What This Bill Does

  • Establishes and manages long-term storage accounts for individuals who store water in underground facilities.
  • Sets criteria for crediting stored water to these accounts, including requirements that the stored water cannot be used directly or must meet specific environmental benefits.
  • Adjusts the percentage of credits given based on whether the stored water is effluent (wastewater) and if it meets certain conditions like being near national parks or state parks.

Who It Names or Affects

  • People who store water in underground facilities.
  • The Arizona Department of Water Resources, which oversees the storage and credit system.

Terms To Know

Long-term storage account
An account where credits for stored water are kept.
Effluent
Wastewater that is treated and can be reused or discharged into a stream.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The bill does not specify the exact effective date.
  • It only amends existing law without providing new definitions for terms used in the amendment.
  • The impact on water storage facilities outside of Arizona is unclear.

Bill History

  1. 2026-01-28 Senate

    Senate second read

  2. 2026-01-27 Senate

    Senate Rules: None

  3. 2026-01-27 Senate

    Senate Natural Resources: None

  4. 2026-01-27 Senate

    Senate first read

Official Summary Text

SB1387 - long-term storage accounts; credits; percentage

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
SB1387 - 572R - I Ver

REFERENCE TITLE:
long-term storage accounts; credits; percentage

State of Arizona

Senate

Fifty-seventh Legislature

Second Regular Session

2026

SB 1387

Introduced by

Senator
Sundareshan

AN
ACT

amending section 45-852.01, Arizona
Revised Statutes; relating to underground water storage.

(TEXT OF BILL BEGINS ON NEXT PAGE)

Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Arizona:

Section 1. Section 45-852.01, Arizona Revised
Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE
45-852.01.

Long-term storage accounts

A. The director shall establish one long-term
storage account for each person holding long-term storage
credits. The director shall establish subaccounts within the long-term
storage account according to each active management area, irrigation non-expansion
area, groundwater basin or groundwater subbasin in which the person's stored
water is located.� The long-term storage account shall be further
subdivided by type of water, if the person holds long-term storage
credits for more than one type of water.

B. Water stored pursuant to a water storage permit
at a storage facility may be credited to a long-term storage account if
the director determines that all of the following apply:

1. Either:

(a) The water that was stored was water that cannot
reasonably be used directly.

(b) The water was stored in a groundwater savings
facility located in an active management area that does not have a management
goal of achieving or maintaining a safe yield condition, the water was stored
between January 1, 2020 and December 31, 2026 and the director determines that
the storage assists in implementing within this state a drought contingency
plan for the lower basin of the Colorado River. The total maximum
amount that may qualify under this subdivision is fifteen thousand acre-feet
per year.

2. If the stored water was stored at a storage
facility within an active management area, either:

(a) The water would not have been naturally
recharged within the active management area.

(b) If the water was stored at a managed underground
storage facility that has been designated as a facility that could add value to
a national park, national monument or state park and the water stored is
effluent, the water stored is water that could have been used or disposed of by
the storer by means other than discharging the effluent into the stream.

3. The stored water was not recovered on an annual
basis pursuant to section 45-851.01.

C. The director shall credit
ninety-five

seventy
percent of the recoverable amount of stored water
that meets the requirements of subsection B of this section to the storer's
long-term storage account, except that:

1. If the water was stored at a managed underground
storage facility that does not qualify as an existing effluent managed
underground storage facility and that had not been designated at the time of
storage as a facility that could add value to a national park, national
monument or state park and the water stored is effluent, the director shall
credit to the storer's long-term storage account fifty percent of the
recoverable amount of water that meets the requirements of subsection B of this
section. For storage of effluent in a managed underground storage
facility that is located in a recreational corridor channelization district
established pursuant to title 48, chapter 35, the director may increase the
storage credits earned from fifty percent to ninety-five

percent
if both of the following apply:

(a) The effluent was not discharged into the stream
where the facility is located before the permit application for that facility
was filed.

(b) The director determines that the storage of
effluent in the facility will provide a greater benefit to aquifer conditions
in the active management area or, if outside an active management area, to the
groundwater basin than would accrue to the active management area or
groundwater basin if the effluent is used or disposed of in another manner.

2. If the water was stored at a groundwater savings
facility and the storer has not met the burden of proving that one hundred
percent of the in lieu water was used on a gallon-for-gallon
substitute basis for groundwater, the director shall credit to the storer's
long-term storage account only the percentage of the in lieu water that
meets the requirements of subsection B of this section and that was proven to
the director's satisfaction as being used on a gallon-for-gallon
substitute basis for groundwater.

3. The director shall credit to the storer's
long-term storage account ninety percent of the recoverable amount of the water
that meets the requirements of subsection B of this section if all of the
following apply:

(a) The stored water was central Arizona project
water that qualifies as water that cannot reasonably be used directly due
solely to the exclusion of groundwater withdrawn by the storer for mineral
extraction or metallurgical processing under section 45-802.01, paragraph
23, subdivision (c).

(b) The storer was engaged in mineral extraction and
metallurgical processing within an initial active management area on or before
January 1, 2011.

(c) All exterior boundaries of the storage facility
that is used to store the stored water are more than twenty miles from a well
owned by the storer on January 1, 2012 and that well is not an exempt well and
any one or more of the following apply:

(i) The well is an existing well as defined in
section 45-591, paragraph 1.

(ii) The department has issued a permit for the well
under section 45-599, subsection C.

(iii) The well was drilled pursuant to a mineral
extraction and metallurgical processing permit issued by the department under
section 45-514.

4. Except as otherwise provided in paragraph 2 of
this subsection, the director shall credit to the storer's long-term
storage account or conservation district account one hundred percent of the
recoverable amount of water that meets the requirements of subsection B of this
section if any of the following applies:

(a) The water stored was effluent that was stored at
a constructed underground storage facility, a groundwater savings facility or a
managed underground storage facility that was designated at the time of storage
as a facility that could add value to a national park, national monument or
state park.

(b) The water was stored in an active management
area and the stored water is water from outside the active management area that
would not have reached the active management area without the efforts of the
holder of the long-term storage credits.

(c) The water was stored outside an active
management area and the stored water is water from outside the groundwater
basin in which the water was stored that would not have reached the groundwater
basin without the efforts of the holder of the long-term storage credits.

(d) The water was stored for purposes of
establishing and maintaining a replenishment reserve pursuant to section 48-3772,
subsection E.

(e) The water was stored for replenishment purposes
pursuant to section 48-3771 and credited directly to a conservation
district account pursuant to section 45-859.01, subsection E.

D. The director shall credit a person's long-term
storage account by the amount of long-term storage credits assigned to
that person by another holder of long-term storage credits pursuant to
section 45-854.01.

E. The director shall debit the appropriate
subaccount of a person's long-term storage account:

1. One hundred percent of the amount of stored water
that the holder of the long-term storage credits has recovered during the
calendar year pursuant to the permit.

2. The amount of long-term storage credits
that the person has assigned to another person or transferred to a master
replenishment account, conservation district account or water district account.

3. If the water was stored in an active management
area, the amount of water during the calendar year that migrates to a location
outside the active management area or to a location within the active
management area where it cannot be beneficially used within a reasonable period
of time by persons other than the storer with rights to withdraw and use
groundwater.

4. If the water was stored outside of an active
management area, the amount of water during the calendar year that migrates to
a location outside the groundwater basin in which the storage facility is
located or to a location in the groundwater basin where it cannot be
beneficially used within a reasonable period of time by persons other than the
storer with rights to withdraw and use groundwater.

5. The amount of long-term storage credits
that the storer, pursuant to section 45-853.01, subsection B, has applied
to offset groundwater withdrawn or used in excess of the storer's per capita
municipal conservation requirements under the second management plan.

6. The amount of long-term storage credits
that are held by the Arizona water banking authority and that the authority has
chosen to extinguish.

F. To the extent the total amount of water withdrawn
by a person from wells designated as recovery wells pursuant to section 45-834.01
during a calendar year exceeds the amount of stored water recovered by the
person on an annual basis pursuant to section 45-851.01 and the amount of
long-term storage credits recovered by the person, the excess amount of
water recovered shall be considered groundwater withdrawn pursuant to chapter 2
of this title.
END_STATUTE