California Natural Resources Agency: Environment and Conservation
The California Natural Resources Agency (CNRA) sits at the center of the state's environmental governance structure, overseeing a portfolio of departments, boards, and conservancies responsible for managing land, water, wildlife, and climate-related programs. This page covers the agency's statutory scope, operational mechanisms, the scenarios that trigger agency involvement, and the jurisdictional boundaries that define where CNRA authority begins and ends.
Definition and Scope
The California Natural Resources Agency is a cabinet-level state agency established under California Government Code § 12805, with the Secretary of Natural Resources appointed by the Governor and subject to Senate confirmation. The agency functions as an umbrella authority over more than two dozen subordinate entities, including the California Department of Water Resources, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife.
CNRA's mandate spans five primary domains:
- Water resources — Oversight of water supply infrastructure, flood management, groundwater sustainability, and the Delta ecosystem.
- Forestry and fire — Regulation of timber harvesting, wildfire prevention programs, and state responsibility area fire protection.
- Wildlife and habitat — Species protection, hunting and fishing licensing, and natural lands conservation.
- Coastal and marine resources — Coordination with the California Coastal Commission on shoreline development and ocean health.
- Climate and biodiversity programs — Implementation of 30x30, California's initiative to conserve 30 percent of the state's lands and coastal waters by 2030 (CNRA 30x30 Framework).
The agency's statutory authority derives from the California Government Code, the Public Resources Code, and the Fish and Game Code. The California Environmental Policy Act (CEQA) intersects with CNRA operations across virtually all major project reviews, requiring environmental impact analysis before state-funded or state-approved projects proceed.
Scope limitations: CNRA does not regulate air quality — that function belongs to the California Air Resources Board, which operates under the California Environmental Protection Agency (CalEPA), a separate cabinet-level agency. Energy facility siting is addressed primarily through the California Energy Commission. Federal lands in California, which account for approximately 57 percent of the state's total land area (U.S. Bureau of Land Management, California State Office), fall under federal jurisdiction and are not covered by CNRA authority except where state and federal programs intersect through cooperative agreements.
How It Works
CNRA operates through a layered structure in which the Secretary's office sets policy direction and coordinates interagency priorities, while subordinate departments and boards carry out permitting, enforcement, land management, and scientific programs under their own enabling statutes.
Key operational mechanisms include:
- Grant administration — CNRA administers bond-funded grant programs under measures such as Proposition 68 (2018), which authorized $4 billion for parks, natural resources, and water infrastructure (California Legislative Analyst's Office, Proposition 68 Analysis).
- Interagency coordination — The agency convenes working groups that link CNRA departments with CalEPA, the California Department of Food and Agriculture, and the California Department of Transportation on shared resource concerns such as habitat connectivity and groundwater management.
- Regulatory backstop — Subordinate boards such as the State Water Resources Control Board (shared functionally between CNRA and CalEPA) issue water rights permits, waste discharge requirements, and basin plan amendments.
- Land acquisition and stewardship — Through the Wildlife Conservation Board and State Coastal Conservancy, the agency acquires and manages conservation easements and fee-title lands statewide.
The public entry point for agency services, permit inquiries, and grant applications is structured through individual department portals and consolidated at the main CNRA website (resources.ca.gov), which serves as the official gateway to the full agency network. A broader orientation to California government structure is available at the site index.
Common Scenarios
CNRA authority is most frequently engaged in the following operational contexts:
- Timber harvest plan review — Private landowners proposing commercial timber operations on non-federal lands must file a Timber Harvest Plan with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection under the Z'berg-Nejedly Forest Practice Act of 1973.
- Streambed alteration agreements — Any project that could alter the flow or bed of a river, stream, or lake requires a Streambed Alteration Agreement from the California Department of Fish and Wildlife under Fish and Game Code § 1602.
- Water rights applications — New appropriative water rights require a permit from the State Water Resources Control Board, a process that can take multiple years and involves public notice periods of at least 60 days.
- Coastal development coordination — Projects within the coastal zone require California Coastal Commission approval, with CNRA departments providing technical input on biological and hydrological impacts.
- Wildfire mitigation compliance — Property owners in State Responsibility Areas must comply with Board of Forestry defensible space standards, enforced through Cal Fire inspections.
Decision Boundaries
CNRA authority applies when:
- The activity involves a state-managed natural resource (water, timber, wildlife, or public land held in state title).
- The project requires a permit or approval from a CNRA subordinate department under the Public Resources Code or Fish and Game Code.
- State bond funds or CNRA-administered grants are involved in project financing.
CNRA authority does not apply when:
- The activity occurs entirely on federally managed land (National Forests, BLM land, National Parks) with no state permitting nexus.
- The primary regulatory concern is air emissions, which falls to the Air Resources Board and local air districts operating under CalEPA.
- The matter involves local land use zoning decisions not subject to state resource permits — these remain with county or city planning authorities under the California county government structure framework.
The distinction between CNRA and CalEPA jurisdiction is a recurring decision point. CalEPA houses the Air Resources Board, the Department of Toxic Substances Control, and the Department of Pesticide Regulation — all agencies whose mandates concern pollution control rather than natural resource management. Overlap occurs most visibly in water, where the State Water Resources Control Board carries both water rights functions (historically CNRA-aligned) and water quality functions (historically CalEPA-aligned) under a unified governance structure.
References
- California Natural Resources Agency — Official Site
- California Government Code § 12805 — Secretary of Natural Resources
- California Public Resources Code — Legislative Information Portal
- California Fish and Game Code § 1602 — Streambed Alteration
- CNRA 30x30 Initiative
- California Legislative Analyst's Office — Proposition 68 (2018) Analysis
- U.S. Bureau of Land Management — California State Office
- California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire)
- California Department of Fish and Wildlife
- State Water Resources Control Board