The #ColoradoRiver and reckoning time for the Front Range — Allen Best (BigPivots.com) #COriver #aridification

Click the link to read the article on the Big Pivots website (Allen Best):

May 26, 2026

Dissonance exists between life-close-to-normal policies regarding urban water use and the growing crisis on the river

Casually surveying the urban landscapes in much of Coloradoโ€™s Front Range, youโ€™d never know that the Colorado River โ€” the source for roughly half the water of the cities โ€” has deteriorated to its most pitiful shape of perhaps the last century.

Oh, yes, some utilities โ€” notably Denver Water and Aurora Water, which together serve 1.9 million residents โ€” have imposed rigorous stage-one drought watering restrictions. Outdoor irrigation is allowed twice per week and never during the heat of day. Other water utilities that tap Colorado River water, however, have asked only for voluntary cutbacks, if any at all.

Jeff Lukas via the Western Water Assessment.

Jeff Lukas, a water consultant with several decades invested in climate change work, says this seeming aloofness of some cities will not persist indefinitely. That is certainly true if the record heat and abnormal dryness of the past winter continues into 2027. They may have no choice.

โ€œI think Front Range cities will be asked, whether nicely or not, to reduce their Colorado River diversions,โ€ said Lukas in a May 11 webinar. โ€œThe mechanism for that is unclear, but I think itโ€™s going to happen.โ€

Water rights of the Front Range cities โ€” and many of those on the Western Slope, too โ€” are junior to the Colorado River Compact. It was negotiated in 1922, making diversions more recent than that junior.

Problems in the basin were becoming apparent in the 1990s. The warming climate in this century has provoked changes. By all accounts, they have not been enough.

Lukas, as a dendrochronologist at the Institute of Alpine and Arctic Research in Boulder 20 years ago, was teasing out evidence from tree rings to understand the climates of the Colorado River Basin during the last 1,200 years.

Later, as a scientist with the Western Water Assessment, Lukas co-authored (with Liz Peyton) a 2020 report called Colorado River Basin Climate and Hydrology: State of the Science. That 500-page report integrated more than 800peer-reviewed studies to help water managers understand physical processes, climate risks, and forecasting tools across the basin.

In 2024, with the state climatologist, Russ Schumacher, and several others, Lukas turned out the 100-page volume called โ€œClimate Change in Colorado.โ€

Based in Lafayette, Lukas now works as a consultant. At Lukas Climate Research and Consulting, he specializes in the overlapping areas of climate hazards, water resources, and ecosystems.

Lukas, in a presentation he titled โ€œRunning dry on the Colorado River: The roots of the crisis & its implications for the Front Range,โ€ explained the big picture and Coloradoโ€™s Front Range part in it.

Defined by the Continental Divide, Colorado has an inverse relationship between its eastern and western slopes. About 90% of the stateโ€™s residents live to the east, nearly all at the foot of the Rocky Mountains, whereas 80% of the stateโ€™s precipitation originates on the west side, in the headwaters of the Colorado River and its tributaries.

Snow from the Gore Range and other โ€œislandsโ€ of precipitation in Colorado provide 50% to 60% of the water in the Colorado River. Photo credit: Allen Best/Big Pivots

Colorado itself provides 50% to 60% of the water in the entire Colorado River, depending upon the year. This year has been a terrible year everywhere in the basin, Colorado included.

Lukas explained that โ€œislands of moistureโ€ provide nearly all the water in this 244,000-square-mile basin. The high mountains constitute these islands. Some places deliver more than others. Buffalo Pass, near Steamboat, famously has had prodigious volumes of snow. This snow, when melted, can produce 50 inches of water.

It takes 20 inches or more of precipitation in these mountain islands to produce meaningful runoff. Even then, it doesnโ€™t all end up in the Colorado River. In Colorado and the three upper-basin states, he said, 16% of the rain and snow that falls becomes water in the Colorado River. In the hotter lower basin, the figure is 3%.

โ€œThe atmosphere takes back most of what it giveth, even in the wetter upper basin,โ€ he said.

Evaporation and transpiration are the pickpockets of this water. Heat produces evaporation, and weโ€™ve had plenty of that this year.

Temperatures during November through April were the warmest on record in Colorado for that span of months. March heat was exceptional. This produced runoff in the rivers that in most cases may surpass that of May or June, the traditional times for peak runoff. Peak runoff has been trending earlier by several weeks during the last few decades, but this was a leap of about two months.

Runoff for April through July โ€” a time that normally accounts for 70% to 80% of annual streamflows โ€” this year will likely deliver no better than 20% to 40%. In its May report, the Bureau of Reclamation said April flows into Lake Powell were 40% of the average during the last 30 years and it expects flows in May to sink to 9% of that average.

Can it get any worse? Count on it, said Lukas.

โ€œWe should expect not every year to look like 2026 from here on out, but more years in the future will look like 2026. And somewhere down the pipe, not as far in the future as we would like, there will be a year worse than 2026 for the Colorado River.โ€

Members of the Colorado River Commission, in Santa Fe in 1922, after signing the Colorado River Compact. From left, W. S. Norviel (Arizona), Delph E. Carpenter (Colorado), Herbert Hoover (Secretary of Commerce and Chairman of Commission), R. E. Caldwell (Utah), Clarence C. Stetson (Executive Secretary of Commission), Stephen B. Davis, Jr. (New Mexico), Frank C. Emerson (Wyoming), W. F. McClure (California), and James G. Scrugham (Nevada)
CREDIT: COLORADO STATE UNIVERSITY WATER RESOURCES ARCHIVE via Aspen Journalism

This is so very different from what was assumed by the delegates from the seven basin states who gathered in 1922 in Santa Fe to apportion the Colorado River.

The role of reservoirs

Taking the big, long-term view, Lukas pointed out that the overall story of the Colorado River is one of modifications needed to suit human uses. โ€œItโ€™s all about smoothing out the natural variability in the availability of water over space and over time.โ€

Reservoirs are the primary means by which humans have been able to โ€œsmooth out the natural variability.โ€

The Colorado River Basin has 60 million acre-feet of storage. Thatโ€™s four times the annual flow. Five-sixths of the storage capacity is found in the desert in two vessels: lakes Mead and Powell. The headwaters have many reservoirs but they are relatively small. The total storage capacity is 2,000 times more than the volume of Dillon Reservoir.

Illustration from the report, โ€œAntique Plumbing & Leadership Postponedโ€ from the Utah Rivers Council,
Glen Canyon Institute and the Great Basin Water Network. Courtesy of Utah Rivers Council

Since 2000, stored water in those two big buckets, Mead and Powell, has declined from 49 million acre-feet to 16 million acre-feet as of May. Of that, 9 million lies at elevations below the lowest outlets. These are called dead pools.

Those delegates in 1922 who crafted the Colorado River Compact, the legal document that provided the basis for nearly all these dams and aqueducts subsequently built, assumed annual flows of 17 million to 18 million acre-feet. They were overly optimistic. The 20th century average was 15.2 million acre-feet.

Now comes the 21st century, and the average at Lee Ferry has dipped to 12.2 million acre-feet. This has implications for the Front Range cities but also farms. If Colorado must reduce its diversions to accord with the compact, those rights dated before 1922 will be exempt from reductions. The giant transmountain diversions have come more recently, as have many of the diversions for towns and cities on the Western Slope.

Accumulating evidence fingers human-caused climate change with large amounts of responsibility for declined flows. Lukas said his rule of thumb is that the role of greenhouse gases overall are responsible for two-thirds of lower flows.

Colorado statewide annual temperature anomaly (ยฐF) with respect to the 1901-2000 average. Graphic credit: Colorado Climate Center

As for the mechanics of this shift, rising heat is one important โ€œknob,โ€ said Lukas. As the atmosphere warms, it reduces โ€œrunoff efficiencyโ€ even more, sending water into the atmosphere instead of into streams and then rivers. Accumulating evidence fingers human-caused climate change with responsibility for most and possibly all of increased temperatures.

Precipitation has declined about 5% since 2000, with a larger reduction in spring, an important time of year to get moisture. Here, the link to the warming climate is less clear. โ€œIt seems increasingly likely that climate change is changing the dynamics of storm tracks and the persistence of, say, high-pressure systems over the interior West,โ€ said Lukas. โ€œThat is, at least in part, responsible for why weโ€™ve had less precipitation since 2000.โ€

The Colorado River, though, had problems even before the warming climate began throwing sharp elbows in water volumes. The reservoirs of the Colorado River Basin were 92% full in 1999, a wet decade overall. Even then, however, the Colorado River had ceased to reach the Pacific Ocean. There were too many straws inserted.

Less than 12% of the riverโ€™s flow goes to urbanized and industrial uses. Lukas pointed out that cities have become more efficient in their use of water. The rule of thumb for Denver and other Western cities is that one acre-feet of water meets the needs of a three households on an annual basis. That compares with two households a few decades ago.

Mining of fossil fuels and minerals uses a small amount. Evaporation from reservoirs and rivers and other โ€œsystem lossesโ€ accounts for about 15%.

That takes us to agriculture. It uses 75% of the riverโ€™s water in the Colorado River for irrigation on 5 million acres. Some of that land lies outside the basin itself. That includes the South Platte and Arkansas River valleys of eastern Colorado.

Over half of that water โ€” about 9 million acre-feet โ€” gets used to grow feed for livestock, mainly alfalfa and pasture grass.

Might cities want to cut deals with farmers to โ€œshareโ€ the water? This discussion has been underway for at least 15 to 20 years. Some pilot projects in Colorado and elsewhere have been launched to see what this might look like. A strong proponent has been James Eklund, a water attorney in Denver. Others question how this is done and, for that matter, whether we want to do it. But certainly, water for urban uses has higher monetary value than growing hay to feed cattle.

Why the restraint of cities?

As for the Front Range cities, the big question is whether they are planning for a river that produces even less than it does now.

In 2024, Andy Mueller, the general manager of the Colorado River Water Conservation District, suggested the need to start planning for a river that may deliver less than 10 million acre-feet in coming decades. Some thought then that the state engineer, Jason Ullman, needed to start sorting through this matter of junior vs. senior rights. Jim Lochhead, a former water attorney on the Western Slope and later CEO of Denver Water, pushed back, saying it was premature given the huge amount of work that would be required. See: โ€œHeading for the Colorado River Cliff,โ€ Big Pivots, Oct. 20, 2024.

At the Zoom session on May 11, I asked Lukas about the modest watering restrictions by Front Range water providers. He had previously described mixed signals from the water utilities. If 2027 is dry again, expect more uniformity around drought restrictions. โ€œBut itโ€™s pretty weird right now,โ€ he said.

With the attention to the Colorado River in the news media, it seemed like a perfect opportunity for the water utilities to mount more aggressive campaigns. Any idea why they had not, I wondered.

The utilities, he said, are reluctant to deliver regulations that produce discomfort around outdoor water-use restrictions. They donโ€™t want to do this unless absolutely necessary.

Part of this is because of experiences during the covid epidemic. A lesson to public servants during that time made them more reluctant to push the public to do things they donโ€™t want to do. โ€œYou only want to exercise that authority, that public legal authority, sparingly and only when itโ€™s clear that is what is really necessary.โ€

Revenue was another consideration. Water infrastructure is expensive, and the money to pay for it comes from charges for water use. By imposing limits, you reduce revenue and hence must charge more for water. The conundrum is that reducing use doesnโ€™t necessarily mean you pay less. In some cases, less water may require more infrastructure. This is a hard message to convey.

โ€œWhat youโ€™re seeing is a dissonance between the circumstances and whatโ€™s happening, at least this year,โ€ he said.

Or at least right now. We have had rainy weather in May. Some meteorologists think we may end up with healthy rainfall this summer. If instead the summer is like the winter, very hot and dry, I expect the utilities might pick up their game.

Jeff Lukas presented in a session called Zoom at Noon. You can see the hour-long presentation here. The passcode is %ACg9*XU

Federal Water Tap, May 26, 2026: EPA Proposes to Repeal Standards for Four #PFAS in Drinking Water — Brett Walton (circleofblue.org)

This USGS map shows the number of PFAS detected in tap water samples from select sites across the nation. The findings are based on a USGS study of samples taken between 2016 and 2021 from private and public supplies at 716 locations. The map does not represent the only locations in the U.S. with PFAS. Sources/Usage: Public Domain. Visit Media to see details.

Click the link to read the article on the Circle of Blue website (Brett Walton):

The Rundown

  • EPA aims to end federal regulation of fourย PFASย in drinking water and give utilities more time to comply with existing rules.
  • FEMA reopens applications for aย climate-resilient infrastructure grant programย that the agency had cancelled.
  • Bureau of Reclamation announces $52 million for three newย Hoover Dam turbinesย that will generate hydropower at lower Lake Mead levels.
  • A House FY27ย budget billย will cut the federal governmentโ€™s primary water infrastructure funds by 24 percent.
  • NOAA forecasts fewerย Atlantic hurricanesย this season.
  • EPA water office leader commits to investigate groundwater pollution in Georgia fromย Meta data center construction.
  • The Trump administration recommends that the U.S. Supreme Court take up Nebraskaโ€™s claim that Colorado has violated aย river-sharing compact.

And lastly, the Bureau of Reclamationโ€™s acting commissioner informs a House subcommittee about the status of Colorado River negotiations.

โ€œSeveral weeks ago, I met with the 14 senators from the Colorado River basin and on a bipartisan basis, several of them said, โ€˜Look, we have a real crisis on the Colorado and we need to get things done and if there are any environmental statutes that are slowing things down, tell us what they are and maybe we can legislate to clear out some of the unhelpful bureaucratic paperwork.’โ€ โ€“ Scott Cameron, acting Bureau of Reclamation commissioner, speaking at a House Natural Resources subcommittee hearing. Cameron said his office has not yet followed up on the offer but โ€œlooked forwardโ€ to conferring with the senators about โ€œwaiving or streamlining certain environmental statutes on the Colorado.โ€

Udall/Overpeck 4-panel Figure Colorado River temperature/precipitation/natural flows with trend. Lake Mead and Lake Powell storage. Updated through Water Year 2025. Note the tiny points on the annual data so that you can flyspeck the individual years. Credit: Brad Udall

As for the status of Colorado River negotiations, Cameron said, โ€œFrankly, the seven states are not in a position where they could agree today, right now, to a four-year deal, let alone a 20-year deal, because of the uncertainties weโ€™re dealing with.โ€

By the Numbers

$1 Billion: Funding now available from FEMAโ€™s Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities program, a grant opportunity to reduce risk from climate and weather hazards. A federal judge ordered the agency to reinstate the program, which the Trump administration had cancelled. Applications are due July 23.

$52 Million: Funding announced by the Bureau of Reclamation for three new low-head turbines at Hoover Dam. Only five of the damโ€™s 17 turbines are designed to operate when Lake Mead drops below elevation 1,035 feet, a threshold that the shrinking reservoir is fast approaching and could breach in the next 12 months, if not sooner.

In context: Hoover Dam Faces New Power Generation Declines

News Briefs

Not So PFAS
The EPA is proposing to repeal federal regulation of four PFAS in drinking water, partially undoing a Biden-era rule that set first-ever limits on six of the โ€œforever chemicals.โ€

Three of the chemicals โ€“ PFHxS, PFNA, and Gen X โ€“ were regulated individually. Together with PFBS, they were also regulated as a mixture.

The EPA will retain standards for PFOA and PFOS, the two most-studied of the chemicals. However, in a separate rule-making, the agency is proposing to give water utilities more time to comply, extending the deadline by two years, until 2031. The agency says the move will โ€œease the implementation burdenโ€ financially and administratively for water systems and might allow for cheaper treatment technologies to come to market.

Water utilities must apply for an extension. One of the considerations is whether an extension would pose an โ€œunreasonable risk to health.โ€ The EPA is proposing that PFOA and PFOS levels below 12 parts per trillion would not be unreasonable. (The federal standard for both is 4 ppt.)

The EPA wants public comment on whether interim utility actions during a compliance extension โ€“ point-of-use treatment, filtration pitchers, education, alternative water sources โ€“ can mitigate health risks above 12 ppt.

Submit comments by July 20 via http://www.regulations.gov using docket number EPA-HQ-OW-2025-1742.

Water Infrastructure Funding Cuts
A House spending bill cuts the two main federal sources of water infrastructure funding by about 24 percent in fiscal year 2027. The bill passed out of subcommittee last week.

The bill provides $1.2 billion for the Clean Water State Revolving Fund (27 percent cut) and $911 million for the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund (19 percent cut).

Following a recent trend, about half of the appropriation comes in the form of earmarks. This money will go directly to specific projects and will not enter the revolving fund. Water industry advocates argue that continuing to take earmarks out of the revolving fund appropriation threatens the viability of the program.

Studies and Reports

The South Platte River Basin is shaded in yellow. Source: Tom Cech, One World One Water Center, Metropolitan State University of Denver.

Great Plains Water Fight
The federal governmentโ€™s top lawyer recommended that the U.S. Supreme Court take up one of Nebraskaโ€™s claims that Colorado is violating the South Platte River Compact, which divides the riverโ€™s water between the two states.

Nebraska argues that Colorado is breaking three articles of the compact. The U.S. solicitor general says that the high court, through a special master, should pursue only one of them: that Colorado is allowing irrigators to take too much water.

โ€œA claim that one State has deprived another of water to which it is entitled under an interstate compact is a quintessential case for this Courtโ€™s original jurisdiction,โ€ the brief states.

Atlantic Hurricanes
NOAA is forecasting a less active Atlantic hurricane season. The agency estimates that one to three major hurricanes (Category 3 or higher) will form.

The category ratings can be misleading. They measure wind speed, not precipitation. Tropical storms and minor hurricanes can still inflict serious flood damage.

Air Conditioning Estimates
The U.S. Census Bureau published data estimating how many homes use air conditioning.

States with the lowest air conditioning use are in New England and the West.

On the Radar

EPA on Data Centers and Household Wells
Under oath at a House subcommittee oversight hearing, Jessica Kramer, head of the EPA Office of Water, committed to investigate impacts to drinking water quality from data center construction.

โ€œWhatever type of construction it is, itโ€™s a priority to ensure that water quality standards established by EPA are being met. So weโ€™ll be looking into that certainly,โ€ Kramer said.

Kramerโ€™s commitment at the House Energy and Commerce hearing was prompted by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) who asked about water pollution from data center construction.

Ocasio-Cortez visited Morgan County, Georgia, a few weeks ago. She returned with jars of brown water from household wells near the construction site of a Meta data center. She displayed those at the hearing.

โ€œThis is what the drinking water now looks like, next to that data center,โ€ Ocasio-Cortez said.

โ€œAs soon as I get back to the office, I will be looking into exactly what you just talked about,โ€ Kramer replied.

Army Corps Deauthorized Projects
The Army Corps published a list of water projects that it intends to deauthorize.

These are projects that were authorized years ago but either havenโ€™t ever received funding or havenโ€™t recently received funding.

Public comment on the proposal runs through August 19. Submit comments at http://www.regulations.gov using docket number COE-2026-0034.

Federal Water Tap is a weekly digest spotting trends in U.S. government water policy. To get more water news, follow Circle of Blue on Twitter and sign up for our newsletter.

Trump administration releases critical federal money for major #ColoradoRiver water rights purchase: $40 million contribution toward Shoshone water rights deal had been frozen for more than a year — The #Denver Post #COriver #aridification

View of Shoshone Hydroelectric Plant construction in Glenwood Canyon (Garfield County) Colorado; shows the Colorado River, the dam, sheds, a footbridge, and the workmen’s camp. Creator: McClure, Louis Charles, 1867-1957. Credit: Denver Public Library Digital Collections

Click the link to read the article on The Denver Post website (Elise Schmelzer). Here’s an excerpt:

May 22, 2026

For more than a year, the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation has withheld $40 million awarded to theย Colorado River Districtย for theย purchase of the water rights attached to Xcel Energyโ€™s aging Shoshone Power Plantย in Glenwood Canyon. The release of the federal funding brings the total amount secured for the purchase to $97 million โ€” just shy of the $99 million needed for the project. For years, the river district โ€” a taxpayer-funded agency based in Glenwood Springs that works to protect Western Slope water โ€” has worked to purchase the rights from the utility. Its leaders want to ensure that, even in dry years, the billions of gallons of water the rights command continue to flow west through the canyon and to the communities, wildlife habitats and farms downstream. The district and other Western Slope entities feared the certainty of the flows would be threatened if another purchaser โ€” like a Front Range utility โ€” were able to snag the rights first. The purchase is a โ€œonce-in-a-generationโ€ investment in securing Western Slope water supplies, said Andy Mueller, the general manager of the Colorado River District, in a news release Friday. The federal dollars will add to the $20 million contributed by the Colorado Water Conservation Board and the $37 million raised by the district from Western Slope governments, organizations and irrigators.

โ€œThis award is a major breakthrough in our coalitionโ€™s effort to permanently secure historic flows on the Colorado River,โ€ he said…

The federal funding brings the Shoshone water rights deal โ€”ย originally inked in 2023ย โ€” one step closer to completion. Xcel Energy still needs approval for the sale from Coloradoโ€™s public utility regulators, and the river district m

The US is seeing stronger storms, so why are droughts gettingย worse?

In heavy downpours, it can be harder for water to sink into the ground. John Leyba/The Denver Post via Getty Images

David Boutt, UMass Amherst

About two-thirds of the U.S. is in some stage of drought in late spring 2026, yet at the same time the country has been seeing more intense downpours. It might seem contradictory, but both are symptoms of rising global temperatures.

The reason has to do with the water cycle.

Water influences every aspect of our lives through a delicate cycle that transforms liquid water into vapor and back again.

As the Earth warms, more of that precipitation is arriving in intense storms that deliver more water than the landscape can handle. When storms drop a few inches of rain over a few days, the water sinks into the soil, nourishing plants and replenishing groundwater. But during heavy downpours, the rain canโ€™t sink in fast enough, and much of the water runs off instead, often fueling flooding.

Water also evaporates faster in warmer temperatures. So, despite an increase in total annual precipitation nationally, the landscape is drying out more rapidly as temperatures rise, resulting in more severe and frequent droughts.

Iโ€™m a hydrologist at UMass Amherst. My colleagues and I are documenting these broad shifts and what they mean for the future of the terrestrial hydrological cycle โ€“ the water cycle on land โ€“ and the people and ecosystems that depend on it. The effects are occurring across climates around the world.

A hydrological cycle out of sync

Fundamentally, the terrestrial hydrological cycle is controlled by two things: precipitation that adds moisture to the ground and evapotranspiration, meaning water that evaporates either from the land back into the atmosphere or from plants releasing it through their leaves.

Over the long term, the total amount of precipitation that falls, minus the total evapotranspiration sending moisture back into the atmosphere, determines how much water moves through the hydrologic system. That affects stream flow, soil moisture and the amount of water sinking into the ground and recharging aquifers.

During heavy precipitation in the U.S. Northeast, water is rapidly routed through the shallow subsurface rather than reaching deeper soil and groundwater storage. Julianna C Huba, et al., 2026

When this balance shifts or becomes out of sync with its natural state, it affects how water moves through the landscape. And that directly influences where water is available and how much is there.

These shifts in precipitation are occurring alongside longer growing seasons that allow the land to accumulate more heat. As temperatures rise, drier air also pulls more water from the landscape, increasing the risk of drought.

The changing timing of precipitation can result in counterintuitive feedbacks, as recent studies in the Northeast have shown.

In one study, scientists at Harvard Forest found that more intense storms are delivering greater amounts of water at rates exceeding the soilโ€™s capacity to retain it. For example, in 2023 they found that high-intensity events in their research area made up about 42% of the yearโ€™s total precipitation.

When more precipitation is concentrated, with long gaps between storms, the surface soils have time to drain and dry out. This has contributed to drier atmospheric conditions as less water is available to evaporate from the land.

This effect from bursts of heavy rain with dry periods in between shows up in data. My research group at UMass found in a separate study that while wet years in the Northeast are becoming more frequent, dry years are also becoming more frequent.

Bars show overall rainfall and rainfall from major storms.
Data collected by scientists with Harvard Forest, near Petersham, Mass., from 1964 to 2023 shows how precipitation has been increasing, with a large percentage of it coming from downpours. Samuel Jurado and Jackie Matthes, 2025, CC BY-NC-SA

During the wettest years over the past decade, we found an accumulation of approximately 2 inches of water in the shallow ground, contributing to higher water tables, more frequent flooding and damage to infrastructure during heavy rainstorms.

Conversely, during dry periods the landscape dries out rapidly, resulting in drought advisories, fires, water restrictions and crop failures in what is normally one of the wetter regions of the U.S.

Finding solutions

Many states are now incorporating climate science into decisions about infrastructure and land use to better understand the risks ahead. Massachusetts, for example, created a climate data clearinghouse to make research and data widely available. It also invested in computer models to examine potential future scenarios of water storage on the landscape so communities and farmers can prepare.

Communities can boost their resilience to extreme storms with urban designs and construction that take flood risk into account, include careful drainage as more areas are paved and add features such as rain gardens, riverside parks and bioswales that move and hold more water where needed.

To manage dry years, communities can implement conservation measures, such as limiting outdoor watering, subsidizing low-flow toilets and showers, and using water pricing to encourage more careful use. They can also teach residents how to use less water and generally be more mindful of water use.

On a larger scale, a new study using computer models indicates that more aggressive efforts to reduce the drivers of climate change โ€“ particularly reducing greenhouse gas emissions from burning fossil fuels โ€“ can reverse the trend of extreme precipitation, eventually returning to rates seen in the 20th century.

Until that happens, however, the world will have to adapt to a changing hydrological cycle.

David Boutt, Professor of Hydrogeology, UMass Amherst

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

US Winter wheat conditions now have the lowest good/excellent rating since at least 1985 — Andrew Whitelaw

Sick of paying to maintain power grids built in the 1950’s?

A close-up view of electrical infrastructure, featuring transformers, insulators, and numerous wires in an industrial setting.
Insulators at an electrical substation. Image provided by Storyblocks.

by Robert Marcos

Most of us might assume that our monthly utility bills are slowly paying off the power grid, but the reality is that the electrical grid is a financial treadmill that never actually stops. This constant cycle of compounding interest, depreciation, and emergency retrofits means that the grid is never truly paid off; instead, consumers are locked into an endless loop of funding an aging asset that falls deeper into debt with every necessary upgrade.1

Energy lost during transmission: In the United States about 5% of generated electricity is lost during transmission and distribution, though some sources put the figure closer to 6โ€“7% depending on how the losses are defined and measured.2

Physical Vulnerabilities: Critical substations are often located in extremely remote locations and are only protected by basic chain-link fences.

Threat of Electro-magnetic Pulse: Solar storms and high-altitude atomic detonations could knock out a power grid by inducing massive electrical currents in transmission lines that might overload and permanently destroy critical high-voltage transformers.

Sniper and Ballistic Attacks: Attackers can easily target and puncture fluid-filled high-voltage transformers from a distance.

The benefit of generating power where it’s needed

Generating power where it is consumed significantly reduces transmission losses that occur over long-distance power lines. In conventional centralized systems, electricity can lose a notable percentage of its energy as heat while traveling across vast grid networks. By producing electricity locallyโ€”through distributed energy resources such as rooftop solar, microturbines, or small-scale windโ€”these losses are minimized, resulting in greater overall system efficiency and more effective use of generated energy.3

Localized power generation also enhances grid resilience and reliability, particularly in regions vulnerable to extreme weather, wildfires, or infrastructure strain. Decentralized systems can operate independently or in microgrids, allowing critical facilities and communities to maintain power during outages that would otherwise disrupt centralized systems. This distributed approach reduces dependence on a single point of failure and supports faster recovery during emergencies.4

In addition, generating power at the point of use can provide economic and environmental advantages by aligning energy production with local needs and resources. It enables the integration of renewable energy sources tailored to regional conditions, reduces the need for costly transmission infrastructure, and can lower energy costs over time. For communities, businesses, and utilities, this approach supports cleaner energy adoption while fostering greater control over energy consumption and sustainability goals.5

Advertisement for My Self + Romancing the River โ€“ Elephants in the River — George Sibley (SibleysRivers.com) #ColoradoRiver #COriver #aridification

The cover of a new book Iโ€™ve just published, Storm in My Head, a collection of poetry written over the 60 years Iโ€™ve been living in the headwaters of the Colorado River, since 1966 — George Sibley

Click the link to read the article on the Sibley’s Rivers website (George Sibley):

May 26, 2026

This is the cover of a new book Iโ€™ve just published, Storm in My Head, a collection of poetry written over the 60 years Iโ€™ve been living in the headwaters of the Colorado River, since 1966. My 60-year celebration. Those of you who prefer your literature in sprints and strolls over the marathon essays I impose on you might enjoy this book. Iโ€™m in the process of getting it distributed, and it may eventually be in a bookstore near you or on Amazon; but for the time being, if you are interested, an email to me, george@gard-sibley.org, will initiate a response on how to get a little money to me (10 bucks plus shipping) to get an inscribed copy wending its way to you.

End of advertisement โ€“ back to the riverโ€ฆ.

Romancing the River โ€“ Elephants in the River

The Colorado River situation is moving toward replacing the existing โ€˜Interim Guidelinesโ€™ for managing the river system with a new set of interim guidelines for managing the river system. This new set is devised mostly by the Bureau of Reclamation, which is growing a little desperate to avoid the embarrassment of having its river system cause the flow of the river to stop โ€“ โ€˜dead poolโ€™ โ€“ behind one or another of its big dams, in a river management system built for a considerably larger Colorado River โ€“ now as mythic a river as the biblical four that flowed out of the Garden of Eden.

All this makes me think Iโ€™ll briefly abandon my historical update of Frederick Dellenbaughโ€™s Romance of the Colorado River, and try to sort through what has been happening recently in the present, most of which weโ€™ve been reading or hearing about in the media.

Reports on the riverโ€™s flow after the Weirdest Winter Ever (at least in recorded time) have just gotten worse and worse; now the anticipated inflow to Powell Reservoir is 13 percent of the thirty-year average, from tributary runoffs that peaked as much as two months earlier than the usual early June. The Bureau of Reclamationโ€™s 24-month projection indicates that, if last yearโ€™s releases from Powell were replicated this year, they might have to stop generating power by late summer to protect the power turbines โ€“ which in effect declares the remaining quarter of the reservoirโ€™s potential storage โ€˜dead pool,โ€™ since the only other way past Glen Canyon Dam is through four outflow tubes of questionable viability that the Bureau would like to use as little as possible.

The Bureau will address this with two emergency measures: first, by bringing a large quantity of stored water down the Green River from Flaming Gorge Reservoir, and second, by cutting releases from Powell Reservoir by close to two million acre-feet (maf) โ€“ which in turn will leave Mead Reservoir lower and diminish its power generation. This is an emergency plan that can nowise be considered long-range planning.

The Lower Basin states in turn have bumped up their willingness to take more shortages for the next couple years by roughly doubling shortages they have already agreed to accept โ€“ if the feds will pay them something for not using water that is not there. Their earlier cuts were basically just enough to finally start taking out of their individual allotments the system losses (mostly evaporation) they have been dismissing, with Bureau cooperation, as being met through โ€˜surplus flowsโ€™ that effectively disappeared when the Central Arizona Project came online in the 1990s.

The four Upper Basin states have responded by suggested that it might be time to bring in a facilitator or mediator to conduct the seven-state negotiations on future management planning. This launched an episode of fussing between the Lower and Upper Basins as to who first had that idea, with the other basin objecting to it. But no one seems to be totally opposed to the idea at this point, and it might happen. 

Udall/Overpeck 4-panel Figure Colorado River temperature/precipitation/natural flows with trend. Lake Mead and Lake Powell storage. Updated through Water Year 2025. Note the tiny points on the annual data so that you can flyspeck the individual years. Credit: Brad Udall

But basically it all seems to be in reaction to an โ€˜emergencyโ€™ water year, with no advance on more long-range planning โ€“ and there is no reason to believe that this year in just a one-shot emergency like the 1977 water year. It is just the most extreme year in an extreme period โ€“ the past quarter century โ€“ that is probably the shape of the future in the Colorado River region, and there are no more Flaming Gorge reservoirs to draw down for the next emergency yearโ€ฆ.

Itโ€™s probably important to remember a distinction: there is a river, the Colorado River, and we have overlaid on that river a management systemfor managing the riverโ€™s water for its human uses, a system whose parts either store water or distribute stored water to users. But we do not directly โ€˜manageโ€™ the river itself, which runs according larger โ€˜operatorsโ€™ โ€“ to global climate factors that we can inadvertently change but do not directly control, to what is happening to precipitation that falls in the riverโ€™s watersheds, and to how much what lives on the land (including us) interacts with the flow both on and below the land surface.

That last point โ€“ the water โ€˜on and below the land surfaceโ€™ โ€“ strikes me as very important but largely ignored in the stalemated negotiations. You remember the metaphor of โ€˜the elephant in the roomโ€™: a big thing that everyone in the room is trying to ignore because to acknowledge it is to open a can of worms? (Sorry, mixing metaphors here.)

Well, we have โ€˜elephants in the riverโ€™ โ€“ or rather maybe in the โ€˜boxโ€™ containing the sacred Law of the River, through which we try to manage to the river. Thatโ€™s the box that weโ€™re all supposed to be โ€˜thinking outside of.โ€™ Beginning to work โ€˜outside the boxโ€™ on anything will open a can of worms, butโ€ฆ are we going to have any choice, further down the road when it will be even harder if the elephants in the river continue to be ignored?

Trying to think in an integrated way of the water under the land as well as that on the land is one of our elephants in the river. We need to keep in mind the distribution of the freshwater all land-based life depends on (basically a solar-distilled three percent of the oceanโ€™s water). In our times more than half of the freshwater on the planet is โ€˜bankedโ€™ in mountain glaciers and the ice sheets of the polar regions and Greenland โ€“ although this fraction is gradually diminishing under the changing climate. Of the remaining 35-40 percent, most of it is groundwater โ€“ water that soaks into the land, nurturing nearly all of the plant life that is the foundational food, fuel and housing supply for the animal kingdom (including us). This leaves only a small fraction of the water on the surface โ€“ lakes, wetlands, streams and rivers โ€“ and this is also a diminishing fraction, as the warming climate increases sublimation and evaporation from all waters exposed to the sunโ€™s increasing power.

Typical water well

Yet that is also the fraction of freshwater over which nearly all the human squabbling is happening. For a long time, until the last century-plus, that was all the water that most of the animal kingdom could access, but now we have โ€“ and use, not wisely โ€“ pumps that make the groundwater accessible too.

We also know that most of that small fraction of surface water is pretty intimately connected to the groundwater. A river is not just a drain for water that failed to soak into the ground; as a river runs through its low-elevation course in a watershed, it constantly interacts with the groundwater, gaining water when the land is wet and the ground is full of water, and giving water to the land, as gravity permits, when the land is dry.

Healthy mountain meadows and wetlands are characteristic of healthy headwater systems and provide a variety of ecosystem services, or benefits that humans, wildlife, rivers and surrounding ecosystems rely on. The complex of wetlands and connected floodplains found in intact headwater systems can slow runoff and attenuate flood flows, creating better downstream conditions, trapping sediment to improve downstream water quality, and allowing groundwater recharge. These systems can also serve as a fire break and refuge during wildfire, can sequester carbon in the floodplain, and provide essential habitat for wildlife. Graphic by Restoration Design Group, courtesy of American Rivers

This knowledge ought to drive us toward thinking of groundwater and surface water as a single water source โ€“ not just our awareness that pumping the land dry will also diminish the river, but also our awareness that irrigating the chronically dry lands from the streams and rivers not only grows more plants and animal foods that the dry land could โ€“ but some of that irrigation water also sinks below the root zone to recharge the groundwater. The city of Gunnison, where I live, bought a ranch adjacent to the city because the city leaders knew enough about alluvial water to know that their groundwater supply (several relatively shallow wells) depended on keeping that ranch under irrigation from the river — water mostly cleaned by the ground it passes through.

But back to the Colorado River, the fraction of the water that does not soak into the land is a larger fraction than you would find in gentler lands primarily because most of the water falls on mountains in winter as snow, which melts in a relatively short time period as the weather warms, too fast for all of it to sink into land that is often too steep or too rocky for absorbing it anyway. But even in that โ€˜runoff period,โ€™ scientists are learning that a lot of the water in the stream in the โ€˜spring floodโ€™ season is groundwater flowing in from saturated lands.

Despite knowing all this, however, we persist in fighting over the fraction of freshwater that flows in the riverโ€™s watersheds through the year in the Colorado River region (natural basin plus out-of-basin extensions), and pay little in a basin-wide way to the use and abuse of groundwater. Only Colorado โ€“ to the best of my knowledge โ€“ has tried statewide to legally integrate the use of surface waters and groundwater: since 1969 all groundwater users had to acquire water rights, in the same priority system with surface water users. And โ€“ before there was easy access to computers and spreadsheets โ€“ all groundwater uses going back almost a century were also integrated into that priority system, a massive โ€˜can of wormsโ€™ to negotiate.

Whatโ€™s been happening in Colorado for 35 years then is the beginning of the intelligent management of an integrated surface-and-groundwater supply โ€“ apparently far too intelligent for the Trumpish agri-industrialists of the two largest Colorado River water users, Southern California and Arizona. Arizona was forced to develop a groundwater management plan (1970) for the areas of Arizona that would be served by the federal Central Arizona Project, in order to get Congress to pass the project; but the rest of the state has been pumping groundwater at prodigious rates, with surface subsidence as evidence of collapsing emptied aquifers that are lost forever. Most of Californiaโ€™s groundwater overpumping is up in the Central Valley, not โ€˜servedโ€™ by the Colorado River, but as Colorado River flows inexorably diminish in a warming world, there will be growing temptations to pump in the Imperial and Coachella Valleys.

I have not found figures for the amount of unregulated groundwater โ€˜miningโ€™ that goes on in the Colorado river region, but the number and volume of aquifers that have collapsed and been lost due to water-mining would probably go a long way toward filling Mead and Powell Reservoirs. And if you pause for a second and think about it, storing water underground is probably better than storing it in open reservoirs under a desert sun.

That is not the only elephant in the Colorado River โ€“ and most of them lead back, one way or another to the Colorado River Compact. The โ€˜temporaryโ€™ two-basin division that has clearly become toxic. Acknowledgement that the compact commissionโ€™s original goal of a seven-state division is not just possible now, but has been realized, to everyoneโ€™s discontent, making the two-basin division nothing but a battleground. Acceptance of the fact that the diminished river will continue to diminish so long as we continue to put greenhouse gases into the atmosphere faster than the planet can absorb them. Acknowledgment of the fact that as the planet warms, surface storage in big desert reservoirs is a bad idea that will get worse. Acceptance of the fact that the reconvening of a compact commission is overdue, to formalize the seven-state division and its appropriative consequences. And maybe the biggest worm-can of all: are some reasonable, even moral, limits on the appropriation doctrine possible?

Weโ€™ll look at some of these other elephants in future posts here โ€“ which I think is where the โ€˜romance of the Colorado Riverโ€™ is today. I also think we will never have a workable resolution to our current river-system problems until we take on the elephants and bump our own consciousness of water in the arid regions up a notch from the naive โ€˜conquest of the desert.โ€™

Map of the Colorado River drainage basin, created using USGS data. By Shannon1 Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0

Article: Restoring dryland water cycles for precipitation feedback and climate stability; a review — Laura M. Norman, Michael M. Pollock, Francina Dominguez, Michael A. Crimmins, David Lawrence5ย and Michael Dettinger (Frontiers inย Environmental Science)

Click the link to access the report on the Frontiers inย Environmental Science website (Laura M. Norman, Michael M. Pollock, Francina Dominguez, Michael A. Crimmins, David Lawrence5ย and Michael Dettinger). Here’s the abstract:

Drylands across the globe are experiencing intensifying water scarcity, land degradation, and hydroclimatic extremes. This review integrates evidence from multidecadal field studies, hydrologic monitoring, geomorphic and ecological assessments, remote sensing, and landโ€“atmosphere science to evaluate how restoration influences key components of the terrestrial water cycle. Low-tech natural infrastructure in dryland streams (NIDS)โ€”including check dams, leaky weirs, one-rock dams, and gabionsโ€”has emerged as a promising but under-synthesized nature-based solution for restoring hydrologic function in these environments. We describe the mechanisms through which these interventions modify runoff detention, infiltration, sediment and alluvial storage, shallow-groundwater recharge, vegetation recovery, and surface-energy partitioning, and we summarize outcomes across diverse dryland settings. Findings consistently show increased water residence time, enhanced soil-moisture storage, expanded riparian vegetation, extended flow duration, and shifts toward greater latent-heat fluxโ€”producing localized cooling and strengthened ecohydrological feedbacks. Building on these localized effects, we articulate a hypothesis that links the spatial extent of restoration, the density of NIDS per unit drainage area, and the magnitude of the latent-to-sensible-heat contrast generated by wetter post-rainfall conditions. Specifically, we hypothesize that when NIDS are implemented at densities permitted by topography and across areas large enough to maintain elevated soil moisture after storm events, the resulting increases in latent heat flux, surface cooling, and boundary-layer moistening may enhance moisture convergence and boundary-layer development, potentially increasing the likelihood or stability of convective precipitation, analogous to how reductions in these processes have contributed to regional drought intensification. These landโ€“atmosphere feedbacks remain untested at scale but represent an important research Frontier. By integrating hydrologic, geomorphic, ecological, and atmospheric perspectives, this review provides a comprehensive framework for considering how low-tech, landscape-scale interventions can strengthen watershed resilience and contribute to climate-relevant nature-based solutions.

The latest seasonal outlooks, through August 31, 2026, are hot off the presses from the Climate Prediction Center

โ€˜We canโ€™t control the weather, but we can control the tapโ€™: Governor Cox declares statewide emergency as Utah drought worsens — The Salt Lake Tribune

Little Dell Reservoir after an April snowstorm. By Jonmorrey – Own work, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=6829539

Click the link to read the article on The Salt Lake Tribune website (Leia Larsen). Here’s an excerpt:

May 21, 2026

Enforcement actions will be left up to local water providers, who urge Utahns to cut back on outdoor irrigation.

Following Utahโ€™s winter of โ€œno-pack,โ€ Gov. Spencer Cox has declared a state of emergency over drought conditions. The governor and Utah water managers stood near the shores of Little Dell Reservoir in Salt Lake County to outline how dire conditions have become: the worst snowfall seen in generations. Record-breaking spring heat. Rural towns that will have practically no irrigation season this summer. Forestry managers bracing for a rough fire season. And the continued decline of the Great Salt Lake and Colorado River.

โ€œWe canโ€™t bank on what Mother Nature might deliver next winter,โ€ Cox said at a news conference Thursday [May 22, 2026]. โ€œPrecipitation isnโ€™t promised, and conservation is a choice that we can all make, and must make at this time.โ€

Utahโ€™s April 1 snowpack averaged 2.7 inches of snow water equivalent, the amount of water the snow releases when it melts. Thatโ€™s the lowest since 1930, the governor said. The normal snow water equivalent is around 14 inches at the start of April. In 2023, which saw record snowfall, the state had an average of 28 inches in April. Snowmelt provides almost all of the water supplies across the state, and runoff is what helps the Great Salt Lake and reservoirs rise each spring. The governorโ€™s emergency declaration does not contain any mandatory actions, though. It calls on Utahns to voluntarily take water-saving measures like fixing irrigation leaks, installing low-flow toilets and replacing unused grass with water-wise plants…The Utah Department of Agriculture and Food said the declaration opens up the Emergency Disaster Relief Loan program for farmers and ranchers across the state. The program offers seven-year loans of up to $100,000 at 0% interest for the first 2 years, and 2.75% interest thereafter. Those funds can only be used for declared disaster-related losses not covered by insurance, the department said.

“I Am Not Optimistic”: Western Slope Leaders Gather as #ColoradoRiver Crisis Deepens — KVNF #COriver #aridification

Udall/Overpeck 4-panel Figure Colorado River temperature/precipitation/natural flows with trend. Lake Mead and Lake Powell storage. Updated through Water Year 2025. Note the tiny points on the annual data so that you can flyspeck the individual years. Credit: Brad Udall

Click the link to read the article on the KVNF website (Brody Wilson). Here’s an excerpt:

May 19, 2026

A special mid-year West Slope Water Summit brought together water managers and community leaders to address a dire water year. Projected inflows into Lake Powell are expected to be well below half of normal โ€” and negotiations over the river’s future remain unresolved.

A special mid-year West Slope Water Summit convened this week in Montrose โ€” called early because the situation couldn’t wait until November. Montrose County Commissioner Sue Hansen organized the gathering after attending the Colorado River District’s State of the River address. She told attendees it was time to step up the urgency.

“This year is the first year that I am not optimistic,” Hansen said. “This is unprecedented and perhaps sobering for all of us.”

[…]

“The Lower Basin has put out, maybe you guys have heard of this, bridge proposal a couple weeks ago that in my opinion is a joke,” she said.

Her frustration centers on the math. The proposal calls for reducing water use by 3 million acre-feet over two years. But Flinker says that’s nowhere near enough โ€” the river needs cuts of at least that much every single year. At the heart of the standoff is a hard reality. There is currently much less water in the river than we have been using, and no one anticipates that changing any time soon.

As Flinker puts it, “Well, I can speak for myself and you probably have the same opinion. Who wants to reduce their water usage? Right? No one. And the Lower Basin has used over 10 million, close to 11 million, acre-feet out of this river every year, much above their allocation. They don’t want to use less – especially when it’s not a little less – it’s like half, right?”

The #Colorado Legislature okays tougher rules for managing farmlands dried out by urban water transfers — Michael Booth (Fresh Water News)

Flood irrigation in the Arkansas Valley via Greg Hobbs

Click the link to read the article on the Water Education Colorado website (Michael Booth):

May 21, 2026

Southeastern Coloradoโ€™s farmers and farming communities say theyโ€™ve won valuable protections against the historic worst practices of citiesโ€™ โ€œbuy and dryโ€ of agricultural water, after final passage of revegetation requirements along the Lower Arkansas River that may spread to other basins of the state.

Gov. Jared Polis is expected to sign the measure,ย House Bill 1340 (Revegetate or Dry Farm Formerly Irrigated Agricultural Land), after officials from his Department of Natural Resources testified favorably for the bill.

โ€œFor the first time in Colorado, this new law establishes that when irrigation water is permanently removed from farmland for other uses, the responsibility to properly revegetate and reclaim that land belongs to the entity removing the water,โ€ said Jack Goble, general manager of the billโ€™s primary advocate, the Lower Arkansas Valley Water Conservancy District.

โ€œIt also strengthens the role of local counties by requiring the water court to incorporate their revegetation criteria and enforcement mechanisms into change-of-use decrees. At its core, this law sets clear expectations, creates accountability and helps protect the land, neighboring landowners and rural communities that are left behind when water leaves,โ€ Goble said.

Southeastern Colorado advocates conceded some measures after the billโ€™s introduction.

  • The original bill limited a water use transfer to 50% of the purchased water until 50% of the affected farmland had been successfully revegetated against erosion and deterioration. The bill as passed removes the hard percentage, and gives city water agencies more flexibility when they buy, such as posting a bond or negotiating conditions during local permit applications.
  • The initial bill language had a hard requirement for a five-year water court oversight of revegetation after a rights transfer to guarantee reclamation. The bill as passed gives water courts the ability to create an oversight period, but only when there is โ€œa substantial risk that reclamation could regress,โ€ Goble said.
  • The final bill gives assurances to Arkansas Valley communities by requiring any reclamation agreements with cities to be written into change-of-use decrees, after the details have been negotiated by an intergovernmental agreement in a permit.

โ€œColorado agricultural lands are vital to our economy and way of life in Colorado, and protecting Colorado lands from the impacts of drought, erosion and invasive weeds is important to protecting our natural resources and our communities. The governor will review the final version of the bill,โ€ spokesperson Ally Sullivan said.

Aurora Water officials, from one of the Front Range water agencies that has traveled far for decades to acquire river rights and agricultural water rights, said they support concepts in the legislation, but have reservations about how it might be executed.

โ€œAurora Water has actively worked in the Lower Arkansas Valley for decades, including opening an office in Rocky Ford in 1988 with full-time staff dedicated to supporting long-term revegetation and land stewardship efforts after water has been removed from agricultural production,โ€ said Aurora Water spokesperson Shonnie Cline. โ€œIn many respects, House Bill 1340 was largely modeled after practices Aurora Water has implemented in the region, and we strongly support the overall intent of the legislation.โ€

Cline said Aurora Water backs responsible reclamation, and โ€œat this time, we do not anticipate the bill significantly changing Aurora Waterโ€™s current operations in the region.โ€

Aurora Water is much less enthusiastic about potential future legislation applying the new southeastern Colorado protections to other river basins in the state.

โ€œAurora Water would have concerns with any future expansion of this type of legislation into other regions of the state as it could unintentionally harm existing dryland farming operations or create disincentives for farmers who are successfully operating under dryland agricultural practices on converted lands,โ€ Cline said.

โ€œAdditionally, Aurora Water believes it is important for water courts to retain the authority to independently evaluate whether revegetation or dryland farming standards to be incorporated into a court decree are technically appropriate, scientifically supported and feasible under the specific facts of each case, regardless of where the standards originate.โ€

Controversy over what happens to former farm and pasture land when a distant city dries it up has hit other parts of Colorado beyond the Lower Arkansas River, including Thorntonโ€™s purchase of thousands of acres of water rights in Weld and Larimer counties. Thornton has tried to placate the counties with commitments to revegetate or promote responsible dryland farming when it starts taking water off the acreage and putting it into an under-construction pipeline.

Aurora and Colorado Springs have faced decades of criticism from southeastern Colorado counties for past purchases and dry-ups that left areas like Crowley County looking like Dust Bowl victims. More recent farm water purchase agreements in places like Bent County limit the number of years in a row a city could take farm water, and make other concessions to try to support local economies.

Colorado Springs Utilities said after the billโ€™s final passage, โ€œWe recognize that revegetation of formerly irrigated lands is a fundamental requirement for any water transfer.โ€

โ€œWe strive to forge mutually beneficial partnerships in the Arkansas River Basin, which is why our team spent over three years negotiating terms and conditions for our water projects in Bent County,โ€ Colorado Springs officials said, in a statement.

Colorado Springs officials said they appreciated the negotiations over House Bill 1340 for โ€œtaking these concerns seriously so that we could reach a compromise on the introduced bill that upholds our local agreements. โ€ฆ We believe that reliance on science and collaboration with local governments allows projects to be tailored to unique community and regional needs.โ€

More by Michael Booth

Crowley County. Photo credit: Jennifer Goodland

Four cities that would vanish without Colorado River water

A skeleton wearing a life vest and swim shorts is water skiing on sand dunes, being pulled by a boat with people celebrating in the background.
AI generated image created by Google’s Nano Banana 2

by Robert Marcos, photojournalist

We’ve heard thousands of times (without sources being provided) that 40 million people are dependent upon Colorado River water. But which cities in the American Southwest are 100% dependent and would vanish without it?

YUMA ARIZONA

Yuma, Arizona, relies on the Colorado River for all of its municipal drinking water and is heavily tied to the river for its massive agricultural economy. Yuma has a population of 103,500 permanent residents which share a Colorado River water entitlement of 980,000 acre feet: 97% of which is used for agriculture and the remaining 3% is allocated for domestic, commercial, and military operations – such as those at the U.S. Army Yuma Proving Ground. Yuma conserves its water through high-tech agricultural irrigation, extensive canal automation, municipal restrictions, and wastewater recycling. Despite being a major agricultural hub, local farmers have reduced water usage by nearly 20% while doubling food production over the last three decades.

Agriculture & Irrigation

With agriculture accounting for the vast majority of water use, Yumaโ€™s agricultural sector employs cutting-edge conservation techniques: 1

Automated & Advanced Irrigation: Farmers utilize furrow, sprinkler, and drip systems optimized for specific crops. Irrigation districts are rolling out autonomous systems with remote-controlled canal gates to deliver water in real-time and eliminate excess diversion.

Precision Technology: Fields are leveled using GPS and laser technology, which minimizes runoff and waste.

Concrete-Lined Canals: Over 99% of farmer-owned ditches and irrigation networks are lined with concrete or buried as underground pipelines to eliminate seepage.

Municipal & City Efforts

The City of Yuma actively manages its municipal supply through strict conservation and drought response plans.2

Landscape Restrictions: The city encourages residents to adopt desert landscaping and transition away from water-heavy turf. Residents are advised to water only between 7 p.m. and 7 a.m. to prevent evaporation.

City Facilities: During declared water shortages, the city limits operations of water features, reduces winter grass overseeding, and limits facility water use.

Wastewater Recycling: The city recycles about 40% of its treated municipal water, which is safely discharged back into the environment to recharge the local aquifer and supply the Colorado River.

GREEN RIVER, WYOMING

As of 2026, the city of Green River, Wyoming had an estimated population of 11,307 people. The city itself does not hold an independent interstate water right; instead, its water use is governed by Wyoming’s state allocation within the broader “Law of the River” framework. Under the Upper Colorado River Basin Compact of 1948, the State of Wyoming is entitled to 14.00% of the total Upper Basin water allocation. This translates to a maximum full-supply entitlement of 1,043,000 acre-feet of water per year, the vast majority of which is sourced from the Green River basin.3

The city of Green River, Wyoming manages water conservation through modernized infrastructure, rigorous system auditing, and targeted wastewater recycling, operating in tandem with broader basin-wide conservation blueprints. Because Wyoming faces growing pressure to safeguard its Upper Colorado River Basin share, local municipal initiatives focus heavily on eliminating system losses and maximizing structural efficiency.4

Advanced Infrastructure and Metering

Universal Municipal Metering: The City of Green River Water Distribution department actively maintains over 4,200 water meters across commercial and residential lines. Universal metering prevents unmonitored usage and allows for exact data tracking to optimize conservation modeling.

Pressure Management: The distribution team actively manages 25 Pressure Reducing Valves (PRVs). Maintaining controlled water pressure minimizes stress on pipes, directly preventing underground ruptures and chronic structural leaks.

System Leaks and Audits: The city continuously updates its sanitary, stormwater, and water line mapping to execute aggressive leak detection and repair protocols.5

LAKE HAVASU, ARIZONA

Lake Havasu, Arizona, has a permanent population of 59,871 and is entitled to 28,582 acre feet of Colorado River water, annually. The city employs a multi-faceted approach to water management:6

Advanced Wastewater Recycling: The city operates three wastewater treatment plants that produce A+ quality reclaimed water. This recycled water is used to irrigate local golf courses and parks instead of draining fresh drinking water supplies, and the surplus is safely returned to the Colorado River for downstream use.

Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI): Lake Havasu is replacing approximately 32,000 residential water meters with smart technology. This system provides near real-time usage data and leak detection alerts via the EyeOnWater Platform, allowing residents to quickly spot and fix running toilets or plumbing leaks.

Mandatory and Voluntary Measures: The cityโ€™s conservation plan includes guidelines that limit non-essential uses like irrigation and prevent water waste. Residents are encouraged to water early in the morning to reduce evaporation and use mulch to lock in soil moisture.

BULLHEAD CITY, ARIZONA

Bullhead City Arizona has a permanent population of 43,200 and an annual entitlement to 15,210 acre feet of Colorado River water. Bullhead City, Arizona, actively combats Colorado River water shortages through phased municipal codes. Key actions include:7

Phased Restrictions: The city’s code outlines voluntary rules for Tier 1 shortages (fixing leaks, taking shorter showers), which escalate to mandatory bans on misting systems, decorative fountains, and driveway washing during Tier 2 shortages.

Turf Reduction Programs: Bullhead City offers rebates for replacing high-water-use grass with desert landscaping. The city also partners with local HOAs, using state grants to fund large-scale grass removal and park revitalization projects.

Device Rebates: The city provides direct financial incentives for residents and businesses to install smart irrigation controllers, high-efficiency toilets, washing machines, and hot water recirculation systems.

Aquifer Injection: The city recovers effluent (reclaimed water) at the Section 10 Wastewater Treatment Plant, injecting it into the Colorado River aquifer to ensure it is returned to the Colorado River system as return flow.8

#Snowpack news May 25, 2026

Westwide SNOTEL basin-filled map May 24, 2026.
Colorado SNOTEL basin-filled map May 24, 2026.

Spring runoff has peaked! Also: Steve Pearce confirmed to lead Bureau of Livestock and Mining — Jonathan P. Thompson (LandDesk.org)

Fresh snow frosts the Henry Mountains in southern Utah on May 18, 2026, as seen from Bullfrog Marina on Lake Powell. A mid-May heat spell, when the mercury topped out at nearly 100ยฐ F in Bluff, Utah, finished off the high-mountain snowpack and caused many streams to hit peak runoff on May 15 and 16. But on May 17 and 18 a fast-moving storm moved through and dumped snow in some places and brought temperatures down considerably. While it wasnโ€™t enough to appreciably boost streamflows, it did provide some nice relief and seemed to subdue the desert gnats, at least for a while. Jonathan P. Thompson photo.

Click the link to read the article on The Land Desk website (Jonathan P. Thompson):

May 20, 2026

๐ŸŒจ๏ธ๐Ÿฆฆ๐Ÿšฃ๐Ÿฝ Predict the Peak! ๐ŸŒŠ

When the scorching late March heat wave came for what little was left of the meagre snowpack, I was almost certain that it would cause rivers to hit their peak spring runoff levels in early April. That would have been the earliest spring runoff on record and a grim omen for the rest of the summer. Most of the contestants in this yearโ€™s predict-the-peak contest apparently had the same idea.

Luckily, we were proven wrong, in most cases: A series of spring storms and successive cold spells in April and even May managed to slow the melt and push the peak to a more reasonable mid-May date. A later runoff means streamflows will subside later, stretching out the irrigating and reservoir-filling season just a little bit longer.

There were exceptions, including the San Miguel River, which hit its spring high flow on April 2. And the Dolores River, which peaked at an absurdly early date of March 26. These both drain the western side of the San Juan Mountains, which apparently bore the brunt of the crappy winter. Still, even those rivers had a sort of second run-off season. 

Here are the numbers for our contest rivers, followed by the streamflow and snowpack graphs:

  • The Animas River in Durango, Colorado: After topping out at 1,010 cubic feet per-second on March 27, the Animas came back andย peaked on May 15 at 1,460 cfs.
  • The San Miguel River at Uravan, Colorado:ย The river hitย 400 cfs on April 2, plummeted to just 63 cfs in late April, and then recovered for a second runoff and reaching 241 cfs on May 15.
  • The Yampa River near Maybell, Colorado: This riverโ€™s watershed got a bigger boost from the April storms than those further to the south, giving it a peak runoff ofย 3,480 cfs on May 16.ย This is the only river Iโ€™m hesitant to call, because the Upper Yampa watershed still has 2.8 inches of snow water equivalent, according to SNOTEL figures. If a temperature spike were to melt all of that at once, it could result in a larger peak.
  • San Juan River at Carracas, Colorado: The San Juan hit 1,090 cfs on April 2, which sure looked like the peak. But onย May 15 it reached 1,140 cfs.

Nearly all of the contestants in the PtP contest chose April and even March dates for the peak, making the date part of the contest almost irrelevant. So Iโ€™m focusing on who was the closest on peak flows. And the winners are โ€ฆ

  • Animas (2 winners)ย 1.ย B Frank, with a guess of 1,468 cfs (wow! Only 8 cfs off) 2.ย Sharon Englehart, who guessed 1,500 cfs on June 1. While B Frank was closer in flow, Sharon was closer to the correct date.
  • San Miguel:ย Florence Paillardย with a guess of 450 cfs
  • Yampa:ย B Frankย again with 4,127 cfs
  • San Juan:ย J Harveyย barely edges out B Frank with a guess of 850 cfs

So congratulations to B Frank, J Harvey, Florence Paillard, and Sharon Englehart! Please send your mailing address toย landdesk@substack.comย and Iโ€™ll send you your prizes.

๐ŸŸ Colorado River Chronicles ๐Ÿ’ง

Peak runoff on the Colorado Riverโ€™s tributaries naturally flows down to the mainstem, as well, so long as thereโ€™s not a dam or other diversion preventing it from doing so. Unfortunately, however, the mid-May streamflow surges were barely discernible in the Colorado and San Juan rivers by the time they reached Lake Powell. 

But Lake Powell did get a bit of a boost this month, only it wasnโ€™t exactly โ€œnatural.โ€ Lake Powellโ€™s inflows jumped from as low as 3,500 cfs in late April to nearly 15,000 cfs on May 16. Yet more than 9,000 cfs of this can be attributed to extra releases from Flaming Gorge Reservoir on the Green River. Thatโ€™s a lot of water coming down the river, and it did boost Lake Powellโ€™s surface level by a whopping โ€ฆ half an inch or so. 

Yikes.

Graph showing Flaming Gorge releases jumped from about 2,000 cfs to 9,000 cfs for about a week before dropping back down to the 1,200 cfs range. This was done to bolster Lake Powellโ€™s levels and to help endangered fish.
The Flaming Gorge releases combined with tributary runoff to bring Lake Powell inflows up to 2025 levels for the same time of year. However, it is still far below the median level for May and there almost certainly will be no June surge.
๐ŸŒต Public Lands ๐ŸŒฒ

On Monday, the GOP-dominated U.S. Senate confirmed Steven Pearce to lead the Bureau of Land Management and oversee some 245 million acres of public lands. Pearce, a right-wing ideologue, former congressman from New Mexico, and a one-time executive of an oilfield services company has long been hostile to the very idea of public lands. 

Advocacy groups and Democratic lawmakers have responded to the move with outrage, shock, and dismay, and they have flooded my e-mailbox with claims that this confirmation represents an action that could โ€œredefine public lands as we know them,โ€ as one statement said, and will lead to the wholesale sell off of those same lands. 

To be sure, Pearce is a terrible choice for the position, and by confirming him the GOP reinforced the fact that they are willing to sacrifice Americansโ€™ lands and waters to stay on Trumpโ€™s good side. But had they rejected Pearce, the administration would simply pick someone who is equally atrocious, although maybe a little bit less open about it. Or maybe they wouldnโ€™t nominate anyone at all, and instead illegally assign a perpetually acting director, as was the case during Trumpโ€™s first term with William Perry Pendley.

And even if the administration did nominate a career bureaucrat or someone more reasonable than Pearce, the fact remains: They would either carry out the Trump/Doug Burgum mission, which is to bring the agency back to the days of the Bureau of Livestock and Mining, or theyโ€™d be canned. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum was widely considered to be a strong and reasonable choice for that position โ€” even garnering the endorsement of REIโ€™s board of directors โ€” and he has turned out to be one of the most extraction-friendly Interior secretaries in history. Indeed, the administration has already been doing a fairly thorough job of executing their plan without a confirmed BLM director, so why would Pearce make any bit of difference? 

Trumpโ€™s election is what started redefining public lands. Pearceโ€™s confirmation is just another step in the continued assault on the nationโ€™s lands, air, water, and the communities that depend on them. 

Over the past 16 months, the administration has leased out hundreds of thousands of acres of land to oil and gas companies, handed out drilling permits like lollipops at a bank, fast-tracked uranium mine permits, cut the public out of environmental reviews, opened up millions of acres to energy development, and transferred public lands โ€” all without an official BLM director. And in the weeks leading up to Pearceโ€™s confirmation, at least nine BLM state and associate state directors accepted the administrationโ€™s deferred resignation and buyout program. In other words, they jumped ship voluntarily, perhaps because they could see that it was sinking.

So far, the administration hasnโ€™t shrunk any national monuments or tried any large-scale land selloffs, with the exception of conveying 1.4 million acres of land in the Dalton Utility Corridor to the state of Alaska. This was a unique situation in that it was done under the 1959 Alaska Statehood Act, which authorized the transfer of 105 million acres of public land to the state for economic development purposes (which, in Alaska, usually translates to oil and gas drilling). As we saw during his first term, Trump doesnโ€™t need Pearce โ€” or any BLM director at all โ€” to diminish national monuments or transfer lands. 

In other words, Pearceโ€™s confirmation is just more of the same.

West SNOTEL map (May 23, 2026): “changed colour scale and set range 0-100%, so that not it’s not all red, allows you to see where the problem is most severe”– Daniel A. Walker

Click the link to view the interactive map from the NRCS.

Does the Gila River flow into to the Colorado River, or is it the other way around?

A rusty metal bridge with an arched design, positioned over a sandy path surrounded by sparse vegetation and hills in the background.
A railroad bridge crossing the dry Gila River. Photograph from Storyblocks.

The Gila River has served as one of the most historically significant waterways in the American Southwest. In 1540 the Coronado Expedition had to construct rafts in order to cross the swollen river, which stretches 649 miles across New Mexico and Arizona. The Gila River has acted as an agricultural lifeline, a changing geopolitical border, a crucial westward migration corridor, and the birthplace of Americaโ€™s wilderness conservation movement.1

Four years ago I drove to Yuma and then turned north in order to reach the confluence of the Colorado and the Gila Rivers. After launching my drone my very first impression was that the Colorado River was flowing into the Gila, not the other way around. How could I tell? The Gila River was completely dry a half-mile east of the confluence.

Because of extensive upstream dams, irrigation canals, and city diversions feeding places like Phoenix and Tucson, the lower half of the 649-mile river is dried up completely. It typically becomes a dry, sandy riverbed long before reaching its natural confluence with the Colorado River near Yuma, Arizona.2

Ancient petroglyphs line the (former) Gila River shoreline at Sears Point, Arizona. Photograph by Robert Marcos.

Massive Upstream Diversions

The Gila River basin drains nearly 60,000 square miles. However, major structures like the Coolidge Dam and downstream diversion dams capture virtually all of its reliable surface water. The water is instead funneled into agricultural valleys and municipal pipes, leaving the final stretches of the riverbed barren.3

Rare Exceptions and Flooding

The Gila River only reaches the Colorado River during exceptional flood events. When massive winter snowmelt or powerful late-summer monsoons overwhelm upstream reservoirs, water must be released from the Painted Rock Dam. For example, historic wet winters have occasionally caused the Gila to violently discharge into the Colorado for brief periods, but these are anomalies rather than a steady, daily contribution.4

The “Reverse” Water Flow

Paradoxically, rather than the Gila supplying the Colorado River, the Colorado now supplies the Gila. Because Arizona over-drafted the Gila River system over the last century, the federal government built a massive 336-mile canal system. This canal actually pumps roughly 1.5 million acre-feet of water out of the Colorado River every year to supply the cities and farms sitting within the dry Gila River basin.5

Conservation Credits (Paper Water)

While the Gila River doesn’t add physical water to the Colorado, local entities actively help protect the Colorado River system through legal and conservation agreements. For instance, the Gila River Indian Community frequently signs landmark conservation deals with the U.S. government. They agree to leave large portions of their legal Colorado River water allocations untouched in Lake Mead to prop up dropping water levels in exchange for federal funding.6

Event Announcement: June 3rd film screening of “The American Southwest” and, director Len Necefer (Dinรฉ) Q&A #ColoradoRiver #COriver #aridification

Click the link to register on the University of Colorado website:

Campus Partner Spotlight:


On June 3rd, join us for a film screening and filmmaker Q&A of the critically-acclaimed documentary film The American Southwest to kick off the 2026 Colorado River Conference.

We are excited to welcome indigenous scholar, filmmaker and founder of NativesOutdoors Len Necefer (Dinรฉ) to accompany the screening of the film in co-sponsorship with the Getches-Wilkinson Center and the American Indian Law Program at the University of Colorado Boulder School of Law, as well as with our colleagues at the Center for the Humanities and The Arts in the College of Arts and Sciences at CU Boulder.

Advance registration is encouraged. You can register HERE

The latest El Miรฑo/Southern Oscillation (#ENSO)ย diagnosticย discussion (May 14, 2026) is hot off the presses from the Climate Prediction Center

Click the link to read the discussion on the Climate Prediction Center website:

ENSO Alert System Status:ย El Niรฑo Watch

Synopsis: El Niรฑo is likely to emerge soon (82% chance in May-July 2026) and continue through Northern Hemisphere winter 2026-27 (96% chance in December 2026 โ€“ February 2027).

In the past month, ENSO-neutral conditions continued, as indicated by near-average sea surface temperatures (SSTs) in the east-central equatorial Pacific Ocean (Fig. 1). The latest weekly Niรฑo-3.4 index value was +0.4ยฐC, with the westernmost (Niรฑo-4) and easternmost (Niรฑo-1+2) indices at +0.5ยฐC and +1.0ยฐC, respectively. The equatorial subsurface temperature index (average from 180ยฐ-100ยฐW) increased for the sixth consecutive month, with widespread, significantly above-average subsurface temperatures across the equatorial Pacific. Westerly wind anomalies were observed over the western equatorial Pacific at low levels and were evident over the central and east-central Pacific at upper levels. Convection was near average on the equator near the Date Line and was suppressed around Indonesia. Collectively, the coupled ocean-atmosphere system reflected ENSO-neutral conditions.

The North American Multi-Model Ensemble (NMME) average, including the NCEP CFSv2, favors El Niรฑo to form by next month and persist through Northern Hemisphere winter 2026-27. While confidence in the occurrence of El Niรฑo has increased since last month, there is still substantialย uncertainty in the peak strengthย of El Niรฑo, with no strength categorization exceeding a 37% chance. The strongest El Niรฑo events in the historical record are characterized by significant ocean-atmosphere coupling through the summer, and it remains to be seen whether this occurs in 2026. Stronger El Niรฑo events do not ensure strong impacts; they can only make certain impacts more likely (seeย CPC outlooksย for probabilities of seasonal anomalies). In summary, El Niรฑo is likely to emerge soon (82% chance in May-July 2026) and continue through Northern Hemisphere winter 2026-27 (96% chance in December 2026 โ€“ February 2027).

#ElNiรฑo is likely to emerge soon (82% chance in May-July 2026) — NOAA

New Paper Shows Surges of Concentrated Precipitation Can Lead to Dryer Landscapes — Jake Bolster (InsideClimateNews.org)

The early May winter storm that brought winter weather to Colorado and Wyoming dissipates, revealing the snowy landscape left in its wake. Taken on 6 May 2026, 17:21:00. GOES imagery: CSU/CIRA & NOAA

Click the link to read the article on the Inside Climate News website (Jake Bolster):

May 13, 2026

Snow and rain in the American West is concentrating at one of the highest rates in the world, researchers found, with implications for ecosystems, water management and this yearโ€™s El Niรฑo.

Scientists have uncovered a new driver of aridification, potentially reshaping how drought across the globe is understood.

A new study published Wednesday in Nature by a pair of researchers from Dartmouth College and the Universitรฉ du Quรฉbec ร  Montrรฉal shows that changing precipitation concentrations exert an important influence over landscape moisture retention. When an area receives its annual moisture in a small number of large, wet storms, it can overwhelm the soils, creating pools of water on the land surface. These exposed pools are more prone to evaporation, meaning water that would otherwise reach streams, rivers and dams drifts back into the atmosphere. 

When paired with long dry spells, these storms dry out landscapes, even though total precipitation hasnโ€™t necessarily changed, the researchers found.

โ€œIf youโ€™re asking the land to drink from a fire hose, whether thatโ€™s through highly concentrated precipitation falling from the sky or rapid snowmelt, youโ€™re going to lose water,โ€ said Justin Mankin, an associate professor of geography at Dartmouth and the studyโ€™s senior author. โ€œIt is just a feature of the world that as you concentrate rainfall, less of it goes into the land.โ€

Using several precipitation datasets, Mankin and his co-author, Corey Lesk, a professor of Earth and atmospheric sciences at the Universitรฉ du Quรฉbec ร  Montrรฉal, determined where on Earth annual moisture was concentrating, and where yearly rain and snow totals were spreading out across the calendar.

โ€œThereโ€™s really maybe two hotspots that have the strongest consolidation trends since 1980,โ€ Lesk said. โ€œOne is the Amazon and adjacent regions, too, itโ€™s a huge hotspot.โ€

โ€œBut the other hotspot is pretty much right over Wyoming [and] Colorado,โ€ he added.

River basins across the American West have been drying out under a โ€œmegadroughtโ€ that has gripped the region for the better part of the 21st century, forcing Western states to cut back their water use and renegotiateโ€”with considerable acrimonyโ€”the dwindling resource. Mankin and Leskโ€™s new paper adds to a growing body of science laying out the perils changing moisture cycles pose to river basins, where users are accustomed to receiving a set amount of water at a predictable time.

โ€œThe methods represent a strong combination of direct observations and tests of the relationships using computer simulations,โ€ said Bryan Shuman, a paleoclimatology professor at the University of Wyoming who was not involved with the study. โ€œThese are not patterns that can be dismissed as untrustworthy computer predictions. They show that this pattern has been happening and can be observed.โ€

Shuman, who has previously studied precipitation concentration, said the dynamics outlined in Mankin and Leskโ€™s paper paint a sobering picture for the Westโ€™s climate. 

โ€œThe challenges raised here highlight how the future could involve both dangerous flooding but that that can come along with much worse droughts than in the past,โ€ he said. โ€œSimply put, we could receive the same amount of rain and still experience drought.โ€ 

As the American West staggers out from its worst winter on record, there is a chance the coming El Niรฑo cycle, where warmer water in the Pacific Ocean can increase temperatures and precipitation in the West, brings concentrated levels of precipitation, along with the potential drying Mankin and Lesk describe in their research. 

Since the early 20th century, the American West has blossomed on the vines of federal and state dams and canals meant to impound and transport water from where it flowed naturally to where it is useful for cities, farms and industries.

But this century-old infrastructure and the economies it enables could be โ€œpotentially maladapted to this rapidly changing climate,โ€ Mankin said, in which the same amount of moisture packed into in a few heavy storms yields less water.

Moisture consolidation, which Mankin and Lesk believe is a logical result of a warming atmosphere, is โ€œactually a new mode of volatility, a new way in which precipitation and the water cycle in a warmer climate is harder to predict and harder to manage,โ€ Lesk added. 

โ€œItโ€™s not just more of the same that the West has always dealt with.โ€

ten tribes
Graphic via Holly McClelland/High Country News.

Weโ€™re excited to invite you to view a screening of The American Southwest — WaterEducationColorado.org

Aspinall Unit Operations Update May 22, 2026 #GunnisonRiver

From email from Reclamation (Andrew Limbach):

The Aspinall Unit spring peak operation has been scheduled forย Wednesday, May 27th. The schedule for the ramped increase and decrease in releases is as follows:ย 

The purpose of this release is to satisfy the Black Canyon Decree spring release. Due to the maintenance outage ending on May 20th and unseasonably early peak runoff of the North Fork, this spring peak release timing was chosen to coincide with equal or greater inflows to Blue Mesa Reservoir.

Contact Andrew Limbach (alimbach@usbr.gov or 970-248-0644) for more information regarding Aspinall operations or the Operation Group meeting.

Drought Status Update — Snow #Drought Current Conditions and Impacts in the West: This yearโ€™s peak snowpack will be the new benchmark low for #Wyoming, #Utah, #Colorado, and #NewMexico — NOAA

Click the link to access the update on the NOAA website:

May 14, 2026

West Braces for Critical Water Shortages After Unprecedented Snow Drought

Key Points

  • Snowpack, the western U.S.โ€™s largest non-man made reservoir, is already gone in many places. Significant hydrological drought impacts (low water supply) are already occurring and will continue through summer across much of the West. Compounding these impacts, the West continues to experience long-term drought. Drought conditions can be expected to deteriorate, and impacts to become more pronounced.ย 
  • April and May snowfall in some areas did not offset seasonal snow deficits, but increased soil moisture and slowed high-elevation snowmelt, which may slow drought deterioration and temporarily mitigate early season wildfire risk. Snow did not fall in all states.ย 
  • This yearโ€™s peak snowpack will be the new benchmark low for Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico; there are no comparable years. [ed. emphasis mine] In these states, snow water equivalent (SWE) around April 1, the usual peak date, was 32- 53% lower than the previous record low during the SNOTEL era. In Idaho, record warm temperatures pushed snow to only the high elevations, leaving the state with no historical comparison.ย ย 
  • Earlier-than-normal meltout (snow no longer present) occurred across the Western U.S., with many SNOTEL locations setting a new earliest or second earliest meltout date on record. Water supply forecasts in many watersheds are still forecasted to approach historic lows or at historic lows.
    • In Oregon, 62 of 73 forecast points are approaching or at historic lows.
    • In Utah, peak flows occurred and concluded in many streams before the spring runoff season even started.ย 
  • As the West enters summer,ย evaporative demandย (thirst of the atmosphere) and water demands will increase. This will further strain and reduce water supplies.ย Current outlooksย favor-warmer-than-normal normal temperatures. Any relief will depend on late spring storms, along with the level of activity and geographic extent of the monsoon season.ย 

Snow Drought Conditions Summary

This update is based on data available as of Monday, May 11, 2026 at 12:00 a.m. PT. We acknowledge conditions are evolving.

Quantifying snow drought values is an ongoing research effort. Here, we define snow drought as snow water equivalent (SWE) at or below the 20th percentile, which is a baseline guided by partner expertise and research.ย Note that reporting of SWE by Snow Telemetry (SNOTEL) stations may be unavailable or delayed due to technical, weather or other issues, which may affect snow drought depiction in this update.ย 

Current Conditions

The unprecedented heat wave and rapid snowmelt in March made recovery from the snow drought nearly impossible, despite the April and May snow for some. The April and May storms slowed snowmelt in the high elevations where little snowpack remains and brought rain to the lower elevations, increasing soil moisture. These conditions will likely slow further drought deterioration and mitigate immediate wildfire risk. However, not all states saw this precipitation.ย Outlooksย continue to favor an early start to the wildfire season in some areas of the West.ย 

This water year continues to be the warmest on record (since 1895) in California, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, Colorado, Utah, New Mexico, Wyoming, and Montana; the second warmest in Oregon and Idaho; and the fourth warmest in Washington. The average temperature over the last 5 years was the warmest on record in Wyoming, Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Utah, and Washington. In California and Oregon, the last 5 years were the third warmest 5-year period on record. Many states are experiencing long-term drought, compounding the impacts from this year’s snow drought.ย Record low water supply are forecasted in many locations,ย reflecting the impacts of this year’s snow drought, long term drought, and record warmth.ย 

This year’s western snow drought is considerably worse than significant snow droughts of the past for many states. Even for states where there is precedence, anticipating impacts or drawing comparisons to previous significant snow droughts is challenging given increasing demands on western water supply and multiyear droughts.ย In Washington, snowpack in 2026 was greater than its record low, 2015, and similar to that in 2001. However, Washington is in its fourth consecutive year of drought, and a drought emergency was declared in all previous years with similarly low snowpack. This yearโ€™s peak snowpack will be the lowest on record for Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico. This year will represent the new benchmark low. In these states, snowpack around April 1, the usual peak date, was 32- 53% lower than the previous record low in the SNOTEL record. Idaho also experienced a new record low snow season. In Idaho, warm temperatures melted snow at middle and lower elevations, and no previous years compare to this condition for the state.ย 

Given that snow droughts often precedeย hydrological droughtย (when low water supply becomes evident in the water system),ย significant hydrological drought impacts are already and will continue to impact much of the West.ย 

Jump to conditions for your region:

Widespread Early Snowmelt Across West

Snow Telemetry (SNOTEL) snow water equivalent (SWE) date of water year melt out for Water Year 2026, compared to the median melt out date. Only stations with at least 20 years of data are included. Blue indicates later than normal melt out, whereas yellow, orange, and red indicate earlier than normal melt out. This map is valid as of May 10, 2026. Source: USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS).For an interactive version of this map, please visit NRCS.

Central Rocky Mountains

Much of the snow is gone at SNOTEL stations in Utah and Colorado, with snow remaining at only 12% and 37% of stations in the two states, respectively. At stations where snow has disappeared, the melt out occurred an average of 40 days early. Snow water equivalent (SWE) at most of the remaining stations is at 20% of median or less. Storms in April slowed high elevation snowmelt, but were far from sufficient for the region to recover from considerable seasonal SWE deficits. An early May snowstorm in Colorado brought beneficial moisture to parts of the state, but again, did not alleviate the SWE deficits and water supply concerns. Record low streamflow volumes are forecast for the Yampa River (28% of average) and the Colorado River at Lake Powell (13% of average). Temperatures in October-April in Utah and Colorado were the highest on record, but, in contrast to the northern Rocky Mountains, seasonal precipitation across the region was generally much below normal. Water year precipitation totals were below the 15th percentile for many SNOTEL stations in central Utah and central and northern Colorado.ย 

Utah

On May 7, 2026, the Utah Drought Response Committee formallyย recommendedย Utah Governor Spencer Cox issue a drought emergency declaration for all 29 counties in the state. The recommendation cited record low snowpack, water supply concerns, and statewide drought. Formal drought declarations also were issued for parts or all of the state in 2021,ย 2022, andย 2025. Drought has impacted southern Utah for 8 of the last 10 years. A formal drought emergency declaration allows the state to activate resources, support agriculture, and coordinate water restrictions.ย 

Colorado

On March 16, 2026, acting on recommendations from the stateโ€™sย Water Conditions Monitoring Committee, Governor Jared Polis activated Phase 2 of the stateโ€™sย Drought Response Planย and the state’sย Drought Task Force. The actions followed the warmest start to the water year in the Colorado Climate Centerโ€™s 131-year record, and statewide snow water equivalent among the lowest in more than four decades of records. The last time the Drought Task Force was activated was in 2020. During every year since 2020, portions of the South Platte River and Rio Grande River have requiredย priority callsย to curtail water use to ensure that senior water rights holders receive their legal share. The Drought Task Force identifies critical impact areas to coordinate state-level support and resources for affected Colorado communities.ย 

Arizona

In 2025, Arizona operated underย Tier 1ย reductions in Colorado River Water Supply and is still operating under this structure. These reductions are a result of less available water in the Colorado River, impacting central Arizona agricultural users. These reductions represent a 512,000 acre-foot reduction in water, with most reductions being taken by theย Central Arizona Projectย water users.ย 

New Mexico

Several years of extreme drought and the earliest snowmelt on record are challenging water users of the Rio Grande River.ย The Middle Rio Grande Conservancy Districtย began staggered irrigation operations in late March with natural flow of the Rio Grande. Theย Carlsbad Irrigation District began releases for irrigation on March 22 and has allocated only 2.5 acre-feet per acre to farmers.


For More Information, Contact:

Dan McEvoy 
Desert Research Institute, Western Regional Climate Center
daniel.mcevoy@dri.edu

Jason Gerlich
University of Colorado Boulder Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences / NOAAโ€™s National Integrated Drought Information System 
jason.gerlich@noaa.gov

Tony Bergantino
Wyoming State Climate Office, University of Wyoming
antonius@uwyo.edu

Amanda Sheffield 
University of Colorado Boulder Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences / NOAAโ€™s National Integrated Drought Information System 
amanda.sheffield@noaa.gov

Department of Interiorย releasesย $40 millionย awardย for the Shoshone Water Rightsย Preservation Project — Lindsay DeFrates (Colorado River District) #ColoradoRiver #COriver #aridification

This historical photo shows the penstocks of the Shoshone power plant above the Colorado River. Credit: Library of Congress photo

Click the link to read the release on the Colorado River District website (Lindsay DeFrates):

May 22, 2026

On Friday, May 22, 2026, Congressman Jeff Hurd announced the release of a $40 million award to the Colorado River District for the purchase and permanent protection of the Shoshone Water Rights. The final approval of $40 million award brings the total amount of funding secured to $97 million of the $99 million needed for the purchase. The process now moves into the contracting phase during which the River District will work with the Bureau of Reclamation to finalize the terms of the award.

Colorado River District General Manager Andy Mueller offered the following remarks regarding the broad, bi-partisan support of this project from our federal, state and local representatives:

โ€œThis award is a major breakthrough in our coalitionโ€™s effort to permanently secure historic flows on the Colorado River. This funding would not have been possible without the leadership of Representative Jeff Hurd. His unwavering advocacy within the Administration helped secure this once-in-a-generation investment in a project that is vital to the prosperity of rural communities, farmers and ranchers on the Western Slope.

Senator Michael Bennet demonstrated valuable foresight appropriating Inflation Reduction Act funding to address the growing water challenges facing the Colorado River Basin. His leadership helped deliver this historic investment in long-term water security and protect our stateโ€™s namesake river for generations to come.

As founders of the Colorado River Caucuses in both the Senate and House, Senator Hickenlooper and Representative Neguse fought for these dollars by developing and strengthening coalitions across divides โ€“ both geographical and political. By advocating for the Shoshone Water Rights Project in Colorado and Washington, they helped deliver a durable and permanent solution for the entire Colorado River system.

Shoshone Hydroelectric Plant back in the days before I-70 via Aspen Journalism

Councilmember Sandoval (and Mayor Johnston) you have a bicycle safety problem on Tennyson Street and an unresponsive bureaucracy

Veo vehicles hogging all the public bicycle parking at W. 44th & Tennyson, May 22, 2026.

Veo is parking their scooters and bicycles in the public bicycle parking on Tennyson Street and there is nowhere for bicyclists to lock up to do business with the merchants. The Denver bureaucracy was unresponsive to my inquiries. 311 did closed the request without action.

Maybe the respondents don’t ride bicycles, but if they did they would want to lock them up when snagging some cherry pie, brown sugar cinnamon ice cream, or croissants, like I do.

Veo vehicles taking up public bicycle parking at W. 43rd & Tennyson May 22, 2026.

Look, bicyclists are fine with the for profit folks making a buck, helping out with transportation, and helping to meet Denver’s carbon footprint goals. Just get the damn Veo vehicles out of the public bicycle parking!

It looks like some NorthSiders fixed Veo’s stupid near W. 39th & Tennyson May 22, 2026.

Lacking sufficient water, Colorado’s Farm & Ranch Enterprise prepares for a grim harvest of layoffs, dust, and fallowed fields

A combine harvester working in a golden field of grain, with rolling hills and a clear blue sky in the background.
Corn being harvested on the Ute Mountain Ute Farm & Ranch Enterprise. Aerial photo by Robert Marcos

In 1949 the Bureau of reclamation installed a diversion on Colorado’s West Marcos River that began channeling water to the brand new Jackson Gulch Reservoir. The reservoir had been created to provide irrigation water to Mancos area farmers of European descent. Somehow the Bureau of Reclamation overlooked the fact that the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe owned senior rights to that water, and about a year after the diversion was created the Tribe’s farm downstream dried up and turned to dust. Out of necessity, tribal members turned to cattle ranching.

Thirty-six years later in 1986, the Ute Mountain Ute and Southern Ute Tribes gathered to celebrate the passage of the Colorado Indian Water Rights Settlement. Then in 1994 for the first time in their reservation’s history, the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe received “wet water” in the amount of 25,100 acre feet a year, of both municipal and agricultural water from the McPhee Reservoir near Dolores.

There was only one problem. During the water rights negotiation the Mountain Ute had to subordinate their senior rights to Mancos River water for junior rights to water from the McPhee Reservoir. Consequently, as severe, climate-driven droughts began to hit Southwestern Colorado, the tribe, (because of its junior rights), began to see severe cuts to their water deliveries – sometimes as little as 10% of their full allocation. These water cuts have had a devastating effect on the Tribe’s award-winning 7,700 acre Farm & Ranch Enterprise – including the involuntary fallowing of fields and massive layoffs of both tribal and non-tribal employees.

For more on this story please visit Water Education Colorado

#Drought news May 21, 2026: Extreme (D3) drought expanded in southwestern #Kansas and southern #Colorado. Severe (D2) in parts of Colorado and northeast #Wyoming

Click on a thumbnail graphic to view a gallery of drought data from the US Drought Monitor website.

Click the link to go to the US Drought Monitor website. Here’s an excerpt:

This Week’s Drought Summary

During the week, the contiguous United States exhibited significant regional temperature anomalies driven by a highly amplified synoptic pattern. Early in the period, a pronounced unseasonable cold air mass influenced the Northern Plains, Upper Midwest, and Northeast, depressing temperatures 5ยฐF to 15ยฐF below normal across the Dakotas, Minnesota, New York, and Pennsylvania. Conversely, the Southwest and South Texas experienced anomalous warmth, with maximum temperatures exceeding 90ยฐF and averaging up to 15ยฐF above normal. By the latter half of the week, this warm air mass expanded eastward into the Ohio Valley and Mid-Atlantic, initiating an early-season heatwave with observed maximum temperatures climbing into the mid-80s to low 90s.

Precipitation regimes during this period were characterized by severe convective outbreaks and pronounced moisture disparities. In the early portion of the week, persistent onshore moisture transport resulted in heavy rainfall totals of 4 to 6 inches across the central Gulf Coast, specifically affecting Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. Between May 17 and 18, a powerful frontal system traversing the central United States triggered widespread severe weather across the Great Plains and Midwest. This system produced damaging winds up to 80 mph, large hail, and multiple tornadoes across South Dakota, Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas, and Missouri, alongside localized flash flooding. In contrast, extreme moisture deficits persisted west of the Rocky Mountains, where weekly precipitation totals generally remained under 0.10 inches, further elevating wildfire risk across the southern High Plains…

High Plains

Temperatures were above normal across much of the region this week, with average readings ranging from the low 40s along the Canadian border and in the mountains to the mid-70s across southern Kansas. Highly anomalous early-season warmth gripped the southern half of the region. The core of this heat anomaly was centered over Kansas and Colorado, where weekly temperatures soared 6ยฐF to 12ยฐF above historical averages, with localized spots in southern Kansas peaking more than 12ยฐF above normal. This unseasonable warmth extended moderately northward into Nebraska, yielding departures of 3ยฐF to 6ยฐF above average. Conversely, the northern High Plains remained under a more seasonal air mass; North Dakota, South Dakota, and northern Wyoming experienced below-normal conditions, fluctuating within 3ยฐF to 6ยฐF of historical baseline temperatures. Precipitation amounts varied across the region, with extreme dryness across the much of the region and a highly concentrated deluge along the southeastern boundary. Large portions of Wyoming, Colorado, and western parts of North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, and Kansas, reported weekly totals below 0.50 inches, with extensive areas receiving less than 0.10 inches. This lack of moisture resulted in departures of 0.5 to 1.5 inches below average, causing conditions to deteriorate. Extreme (D3) drought expanded in southwestern Kansas and southern Colorado. Severe (D2) in parts of Colorado and northeast Wyoming, while moderate (D1) drought expanded in parts of South Dakota. In powerful contrast, intense convective activity generated a sharp corridor of heavy rainfall across eastern portions of Kansas and Nebraska. Totals in this localized zone rapidly climbed between 2.5 and 5.5 inches, with departures ranging between 1.5 to over 4.5 inches above normal, resulting in improvements to moderate (D1) to exceptional (D4) drought in Nebraska and moderate (D1) to extreme (D3) drought in Kansas. Heavy rainfall also brought improvements to severe (D2) to exceptional (D4) drought in northern Colorado and a reduction of exceptional (D4) drought in southern Wyoming this week…

Colorado Drought Monitor one week change map ending May 19, 2026.

West

Temperatures varied across the region this week, with average readings ranging from the mid-30s and 40s across the northern tier and high elevations to the low 80s in the desert Southwest. In terms of departures from normal, unseasonably cold conditions dominated the northern half of the region, with departures ranging between 3ยฐF and 9ยฐF below normal. In sharp contrast, the southern tier experienced unseasonable warmth. A building ridge over the Southwest drove temperatures in southern California, Arizona, and New Mexico 3ยฐF to 9ยฐF above normal, with eastern New Mexico seeing the greatest extremes. Precipitation across the Western region was characterized by an extreme contrast between a highly active storm track in the Pacific Northwest and aridity across the remainder of the region. Above-normal precipitation was confined to much of Washington, and parts of Oregon and Montana, where weekly rainfall totals ranged between 1.5 to 3.5 inches, with localized totals in the Cascade Range exceeding 4.5 inches. This activity generated substantial departures of 0.75 to over 3.0 inches above normal, justifying moderate (D1) to severe (D2) drought and abnormal dryness (D0) improvements in Washington and northern Idaho, and improvements to abnormal dryness (D0) to northwestern Oregon and western Montana. Conversely, dry conditions persisted across nearly the entire remaining geographic footprint. Widespread areas across California, Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, and parts of Idaho, Montana, Utah recorded negligible rainfall totals of less than 0.10 inches. Due to the climatological onset of the dry season in parts of the West, this lack of rainfall translated into modest negative departures ranging from near-normal to 0.75 inches below seasonal averages. Nonetheless, deteriorating conditions led to the expansion of exceptional (D4) drought in southern Idaho, and extreme (D3) drought in parts of New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, Montana, and southern Idaho. In addition, severe (D2) drought was expanded in Oregon, Montana, and Arizona, while moderate (D1) drought expanded in parts of Idaho, Montana, Nevada, and Arizona…

South

Below-normal precipitation dominated the South this week. The vast majority of Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Tennessee received less than 0.10 to 0.50 inches of total rainfall, leaving nearly the entire geographic footprint under exceptionally dry conditions. This lack of rainfall translated into widespread departures ranging from 0.75 to 1.50 inches below normal. Below-normal rainfall totals resulted in the introduction of exceptional (D4) drought in the Oklahoma Panhandle and D4 expansion in parts of Arkansas and Mississippi. Extreme (D3) to severe (D2) drought were expanded in parts of Oklahoma, Arkansas, Mississippi, and Tennessee.

The major exception to this dry regime was concentrated in southern portions of the region, specifically southern Texas, where localized convective storms delivered 1.0 to 3.0 inches of rainfall, resulting in the improvement of extreme (D3) drought in southern portions of Texas, Louisiana, and Mississippi. Temperatures were above normal across much of the region, ranging from the upper 50s and low 60s in Tennessee to the upper 80s in parts of Texas. Looking at departures from normal, a highly anomalous zone of intense warmth gripped the western half of the region, where temperatures averaged 6ยฐF to 15ยฐF above historical norms. Conversely, the eastern tier of the region bucked the western warming trend entirely; Mississippi and Tennessee experienced unseasonably cool conditions, with temperatures suppressing to 3ยฐF to 6ยฐF below normal…

Looking Ahead

Over the next five days (May 19โ€“23, 2026), the United States can expect a highly dynamic weather pattern characterized by contrasting temperature extremes and widespread storm activity. An early-season heatwave will make headlines across much of the eastern U.S. through midweek, with interior portions of the Mid-Atlantic and the Carolinas seeing highs climb into the lower to middle 90sโ€”warm enough to potentially establish new daily records before a cold front brings cooler relief by Thursday. In stark contrast, the Intermountain West and Rockies will experience below-normal temperatures to start the week, alongside late-season accumulating snow in the higher elevations of Colorado and Wyoming. Meanwhile, a strong cold front tracking across the Plains and Midwest will spark widespread showers and severe thunderstorms. Multiple rounds of heavy rainfall will bring a risk of scattered flash flooding, focusing heavily on Texas, Oklahoma, and Arkansas on Tuesday before an expanded risk of heavy precipitation stretches from western Texas to the central Appalachians on Wednesday.

Further out, the Climate Prediction Centerโ€™s 6โ€“10 day outlook (valid May 24โ€“28, 2026) favors above-normal temperatures across most of the United Statesโ€”stretching from the Rocky Mountains all the way to the East Coast, with the highest confidence for this unseasonable warmth concentrated in the Upper Midwest. Hawaii is also leaning toward warmer conditions. In contrast, temperatures are expected to be colder than average across the state of Alaska, and in a pocket of northwestern Washington state. Meanwhile, near-normal temperatures are forecast in parts of the South and along the West Coast. Probabilities for wetter-than-average conditions favor the vast majority of the country, including Hawaii and portions of Alaska. In the contiguous U.S., this wet weather pattern extends from the Southwest to the East Coast, with the greatest probability of above-normal precipitation expected to be in the south-central U.S., specifically across southern Texas. The West Coast, portions of the Pacific Northwest, the northern Rockies, northern parts of the Midwest, and northern Alaska are favored to receive near-normal precipitation during this time. No areas are favored to be drier than normal.

US Drought Monitor one week change map ending May 19, 2026.

#Colorado to receive $44.3 million to address โ€œforever chemicalsโ€ in drinking water as EPA cuts regulations — KKTV.com #PFAS

A whistleblower and watchdog advocacy group used an EPA database of locations that may have handled PFAS materials or products to map the potential impact of PFAS throughout Colorado. They found about 21,000 Colorado locations in the EPA listings, which were uncovered through a freedom of information lawsuit. Locations are listed by industry category. (Source: Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility analysis of EPA database)

Click the link to read the article on the KKTV website (Bryce Patterson). Here’s an excerpt:

May 19, 2026

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced $44.3 million in new grant funding for โ€œSmall or Disadvantaged Communitiesโ€ to address polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in Colorado water. That funding comes as the agency rolls back some regulations on those chemicals…The funding for Colorado water is part of a billion dollar investment across the country. The money can be allocated to testing, planning, and infrastructure projects. According to a press release from the EPA, โ€œsmall, rural, and disadvantaged water systems often have fewer resources.โ€œ The program is โ€specifically designed to ensure these communities are not left behind.โ€ […] New rules announced Monday wouldย rescind some Biden-era regulations on PFAS chemicalsย and extend the deadline for water to meet federal standards byย two additional years, to 2031.

Aspinall Unit operations update: Peak flows in a โ€œdryโ€ hydrologic year the Black Canyon will have a 24-hour peak flow 730 CFS in on May 27, 2026 #GunnisonRiver

A double rainbow arches over the Painted Wall in Black Canyon at Gunnison National Park. Photo Credit: Dave Showalter

From email from Reclamation (Andrew Limbach):

May 20, 2026

The Aspinall Unit spring peak operation has been tentatively scheduled for Wednesday, May 27th. A final notification of the release schedule will be sent out that will include time of day ramped releases.

Pursuant to the Black Canyon Decree section 31.5.2.1 for peak flows during a โ€œdryโ€ hydrologic year the Black Canyon will have a 24-hour peak flow of 730 cfs.

The purpose of this release is to satisfy the Black Canyon Decree spring release. Due to the maintenance outage ending on May 20th and unseasonably early peak runoff of the North Fork, this spring peak release timing was chosen to coincide with equal or greater inflows to Blue Mesa Reservoir.

Contact Andrew Limbach (alimbach@usbr.gov or 970-248-0644) for more information regarding Aspinall operations or the Operation Group meeting.

Aspinall Unit dams

#Colorado stream access debate drifts beyond 2026 after lawmakers fail to find compromise between landowners, recreationists — The Summit Daily #2026COLeg

Recreational vehicle: Photo: Brent Gardner-Smith/Aspen Journalism

Click the link to read the article on the Summit Daily website (Robert Tann). Here’s an excerpt:

May 19, 2026

Lawmakers decided against introducing a โ€œright to floatโ€ bill this legislative session, despite a push by river advocates

Last summer, a group of Colorado legislators hopped aboard several rafts with river guides and conservationists to float a mellow section of the Colorado River south of Kremmling.ย  The trip was organized by a coalition of outdoor recreation advocates, whoโ€™d hoped to persuade lawmakersย to once again wade into the issue of stream accessย and what rights the public has when recreating in rivers that run through private property.ย  But over the course ofย Coloradoโ€™s 120-day legislative session, no such bill was introduced. A compromise between recreationists and landowner groups, which lawmakers had been seeking, never materialized…River rafters have been pushing for legislation that would provide immunity from trespassing for floaters who touch the privately-owned riverbeds and banks to help with navigation. They hoped the proposal could provide a tailored solution and avoid the longstanding fight over whether river beds should remain private property or be publicly owned…Landowner groups remained resistant to any legislative approach, which they say would only breed conflict. They would prefer to see river access issues continue to be resolved the way theyโ€™ve long been, with agreements made between landowners and river users…

Heading into this yearโ€™s legislative session, supporters of public river access advocates were again at odds over what kind of policy they should push for.ย  Not long after organizing lawmakersโ€™ river trip last summer, the stream access coalition, made up of several outfitting and conservation groups, split into two camps. One was focused on the right to wade in rivers, primarily driven by anglers, while the other was concentrated on the right to float.ย It was the latter group, which dubbed itself theย River Recreation Alliance, that ultimately pursued legislation this year…A right to wade bill would have meant taking on private property ownership of river beds. Aย study published last year by the free-market think tank Common Sense Instituteย warned that the state, should lawmakers go that route, would be at risk of violating the takings clause of the Colorado Constitution, which prohibits the government from taking or damaging private property without compensation.ย  Johnson believes legislation focused instead on floating would minimize those risks, since it would not strip land from property owners. Her coalitionโ€™s proposal also would have allowed rafters to touch the bed and banks of rivers only for safety reasons, such as scouting, portage and to avoid obstacles, according to a one-page memo Johnson shared.ย  Walking, wading, anchoring or wade fishing would not be protected under the proposal, which also would have provided liability for landowners when accidents or injuries occurred in the river.ย 

Climate Emergencies Are Breaking Water Utilities. Customers Are Paying: Water utilities and their ratepayers face financial strain from wildfire, flood, and drought — Brett Walton (circleofblue.org)

Crews work to extinguish the Eaton Fire, in Los Angeles County, in January 2025. Photo courtesy of Cal Fire

Click the link to read the article on the Circle of Blue website (Brett Walton):

May 20, 2026

KEY POINTS

  • A warming climate is increasing the risk to water infrastructure.
  • The U.S. recorded a record number of billion-dollar weather disasters in the last three years.
  • Weather hazards, combined with aging infrastructure and rising costs, are raising the cost of supplying water.

When the Eaton Fire blitzed central Los Angeles County in January 2025, the foothills community of Altadena sat in its path.

Burning more than 14,000 acres in and around the southern edge of Angeles National Forest, the fire concentrated its structural damage in an area of Altadena served by Las Flores Water Company, a small drinking water provider.

By the time the flames were extinguished, the water company sustained substantial losses that its customers will cover with expensive surcharges. The Eaton Fire destroyed the private utilityโ€™s two reservoirs and about three-quarters of its customersโ€™ homes. More than a year later, effective April 1, the utility instituted a $3,000 surcharge per household, to be paid on the water bill in $50 increments over 60 months. Residents with savings can make a single $2,600 payment upfront.

Failure to pay means either a dramatic household or business disruption. Water service will be cut off. For Las Flores, the funds are intended to be a lifeline, keeping the utility from bankruptcy as it repairs its reservoirs while maintaining day-to-day operations until more residents return and revenue rebounds.

For residents whose lives have already been upended, the surcharge also represents an unwelcome expense.

โ€œSuch an action is not taken lightly, and we recognize that the imposition of this flat fixed fee may have economic consequences for some of you,โ€ John Bednarski, the board president, wrote in a September 2025 letter to customers.

These consequences of a climate-related emergency in the Los Angeles foothills are emblematic of the terrible toll being exacted nationwide not just on land and property, but also on essential duties of government, like supplying water. Las Flores is just one calamity among many in recent years. The number of weather disasters causing more than $1 billion in damages in the United States is climbing. According to Climate Central, the last three years have had the highest number of billion-dollar disasters. The vicious storms, floods, freezes, and droughts have destroyed homes and killed hundreds of people. They are also endangering water supply and reliability as well as municipal and residential financial well-being. 

Hurricane Helene in western North Carolina, in 2024, wrecked dozens of water and wastewater systems and prompted $861 million in state and federal funds to rebuild them. The Hermitโ€™s Peak-Calf Canyon Fire outside Las Vegas, New Mexico, in 2022, so damaged a watershed with ash and debris that the cityโ€™s water treatment plantย could not function. It is being replaced thanks to a congressional appropriation. Persistent drought today threatens southern Texas, where Corpus Christi nears aย water catastropheย due to depleted reservoirs.

The Hermitโ€™s Peak/Calf Canyon Fire resulted in a water crisis for Las Vegas, New Mexico. In August 2022, the city had only 21 days of drinking water in storage. Photo ยฉ Brett Walton/Circle of Blue

A warming planet is magnifying these and other physical risks to water infrastructure while also increasing the cost of recovery. This environmental upheaval is set against a backdrop of increasing economic pressures for water utilities and challenging financial conditions for their customers.

Aging pipes and treatment plants need to be replaced. By one estimate the national need for drinking water, wastewater, and stormwater over the next 20 years is $3.4 trillion, or $168 billion annually in capital spending. New federal regulations for lead and PFAS are an expensive outlay. Additional costs since the pandemic came first in the form of supply chain snarls and rapid inflation, then moved higher with the Trump administrationโ€™s tariffs. Rising interest rates and more costly energy and treatment chemicals โ€“ all these factors add up. The result is that utilities have raised customer water rates, which have outpaced overall inflation for years. Water and sewer bills rose 24 percent over the last five years in 50 large cities, according to Bluefield Research. 

Utility leaders have taken notice of the headwinds. Among the top challenges identified in this yearโ€™s State of the Water Industry survey from the American Water Works Association were aging infrastructure, securing financing, rising cost of treatment, and extreme weather.

โ€œClimate variability is one of the most significant and challenging risks to water supplies and water sector infrastructure,โ€ the report notes.

Management failures in the face of environmental pressures have financial consequences. Earlier this month, S&P Global Ratingsย downgradedย the credit rating for Corpus Christiโ€™s municipal utility from AA- to A. The lower rating will increase borrowing costs for the city just when it needs money to navigate a water-supply crisis. To justify the downgrade, the ratings agency cited the cityโ€™s drought risk, water restrictions, and high capital needs to acquire additional water supplies. Corpus Christi is planningย at least $1 billionย in water infrastructure and supply investments, which include groundwater pumping, brackish groundwater treatment, recycled water, and potentially seawater desalination. The cityโ€™s two main reservoirs are 8 percent of capacity combined as of May 15.

State and federal dollars often fill the breach after a weather disaster. But the need is far greater than the available funds. North Carolina awarded $861 million in state and federal grants to 217 drinking water and wastewater projects after Hurricane Helene. But more than $600 million in applications were not able to be fulfilled, according to Gov. Josh Stein.

โ€œWe need substantially more federal support,โ€ Stein said on May 14 while visiting Canton, a town in western North Carolina that was flooded during Helene. With $24.5 million in state and federal funds, Canton is rebuilding its water and sewer infrastructure.

Canton is one of the lucky ones. The increasing number of weather disasters for water utilities comes at a time of federal disengagement and funding uncertainty, note Rebecca Anderson and Shannon M. McNeeley of the Pacific Institute.

The Trump administration cancelled a multibillion-dollar FEMA grant program for climate-resilient infrastructure before being ordered by a U.S. district judge to reinstate it this spring. The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, the Biden-era law that provided an extra $43 billion for water infrastructure, expires this year with no replacement in sight. A federal pandemic-era program to assist low-income households with their water bills has also expired. Water utilities are urging Congress to resume the program so that they can upgrade their systems without worrying that the cost will burden their poorest customers. House Democrats introduced the Water Access and Affordability Act in April to reauthorize the program.

โ€œWithout sufficient federal disaster mitigation and recovery funding, states and communities shoulder a disproportionate share of response, recovery, and preparedness costs,โ€ Anderson and McNeeley write. โ€œThis burden is often especially heavy for small and rural water systems with limited revenue.โ€

Floods, droughts, wildfires, and hurricanes have always wrought destruction and water-supply desperation. Superstorm Sandy, in 2012, knocked out wastewater plants in eight states, leading to the release of some 11 billion gallons of raw and partially treated sewage. In New York City alone, the damage to wastewater facilities totaled more than $100 million.

But with the rising number of disasters and the increasing intensity of storms and droughts, more financial demands are challenging not just individual water utilities but assumptions about who is at risk.

No utility, even those on apparently solid financial footing, should be complacent, said Greg Pierce, a California water system expert at the UCLA Luskin Center for Innovation. Just look at Las Flores Water Company and its neighbors in Altadena.

Before the Eaton Fire, โ€œnone of these systems were on anyoneโ€™s list of small or underperforming systems, even within Los Angeles County,โ€ he said.

Do “40 million people” actually depend on water from the Colorado River?

Aerial photo of downtown Los Angeles California, provided by Storyblocks.

No, they do not. While it’s technically true that 40 million people across seven states and Mexico have water systems that are supplied in part by the Colorado River, it’s misleading to imply that 40 million people depend on the Colorado River entirely. But the statement – which was taken out of context, has been repeated so often by the media and others that it’s now widely-accepted as a fact. It originated from a Bureau of Reclamation report that actually says, “Although agricultural uses depend on 70 percent of Colorado River water, between 35 and 40 million people rely on the same water for some, if not all, of their municipal needs”.1

Top three reasons why the shortened “40 million” phrase is misleading

1. Agriculture consumes the vast majority of the water, not individuals

The phrase implies that 40 million people rely on the river primarily for drinking, bathing, and basic survival. In reality, agricultural irrigation consumes roughly 75% to 80% of the riverโ€™s water. A massive portion of that goes specifically toward water-intensive cattle feed crops like alfalfa and hay. Domestic, household use accounts for only about 10% to 13% of the total supply. The narrative of “40 million thirsty citizens” masks the fact that the crisis is fundamentally an agricultural management problem rather than a residential population crisis. 

2. Major urban areas only use the river as a fractional supplement

Many of the 40 million people counted in this statistic live in large coastal or metropolitan citiesโ€”such as Los Angeles, San Diego, Denver, and Phoenixโ€”that do not rely solely on the Colorado River. These cities utilize a diversified portfolio of water sources, including local groundwater, northern state aqueducts, state-wide recycling systems, and other local river basins. Saying they “depend” on the Colorado River implies total reliance, when it often provides only a fraction of their municipal supply. 

3. Aggressive water recycling and conservation significantly reduce our “dependence”

Using the word “depend” creates a fatalistic narrative that if the river’s flow drops, 40 million people will run out of water. In practice, many of the urban centers counted in the 40 million figure are highly resilient due to aggressive wastewater recycling and conservation efforts. For example, Las Vegas and the state of Nevada recycle nearly 85% of their treated wastewater back into Lake Mead. Because these cities reuse the same water multiple times, their actual net depletion of the river is much lower than their gross population would suggest.

The first Colorado Streamflow Tracker update of the season showed very low April flow — @COFloodUpdates

Flexible pool of water could be key to protect #LakePowell: Concept paper lays out how water could be moved to where its needed — Heather Sackett

Lake Powell is formed by Glen Canyon Dam. In a concept pitched by a conservation organization, a flexible pool of water could be moved between Upper Basin reservoirs to wherever itโ€™s needed most. CREDIT: HEATHER SACKETT/ASPEN JOURNALISM

Click the link to read the article on the Aspen Journalism website (Heather Sackett):

May 12, 2026

An environmental organization is floating a concept that could help the Colorado River system during extremely dry years like this one and keep the nationโ€™s two largest reservoirs above critical thresholds.

Boulder-based Western Resource Advocates has released a concept paper that explores the idea of a flexible pool of water that can be moved wherever itโ€™s needed most among the basinโ€™s biggest reservoirs.

Water users in the Lower Basin states โ€” California, Arizona and Nevada โ€” currently have about 3.2 million acre-feet stored in Lake Mead through voluntary conservation and efficiency measures. Water users bank water in this pool, known as the Intentionally Created Surplus, and can take this water back out again to use under certain circumstances.

The paperโ€™s authors โ€” John Berggren, a regional policy manager with Western Resource Advocates, and Kevin Wheeler, principal and engineer with Water Balance Consulting โ€” used the ICS pool as an example to explore how the idea would work. They say that if the ICS pool could be moved from Lake Mead to Lake Powell, the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation could have a buffer to more easily protect Glen Canyon Dam infrastructure, minimize the need for large releases from upstream reservoirs and reduce the risk of litigation among the seven basin states that share the Colorado River. 

โ€œIf you took a million or two million acre-feet out of Mead in the form of a conservation pool and moved it to Powell, then you could protect Powell without having to do all the DROA and the 6e releases,โ€ Berggren said. โ€œThis is a perfect year where we would like to have the flexibility to move this water wherever itโ€™s needed most, in this case in Powell.โ€

Berggren is referring to the actions that the federal government is taking this year: releasing up to 1 million acre-feet from Flaming Gorge Reservoir to prop up Powell, as well as reducing releases down to just 6 million acre-feet from Powell instead of the originally expected 7.48 million acre-feet. Projections from Reclamation show the reservoir falling below 3,500 feet by this summer if these actions arenโ€™t taken, jeopardizing the ability to make hydropower at Glen Canyon Dam.

This is a pivotal moment for the Colorado River Basinโ€™s 40 million water users, with a historically bad snowpack and streamflows pushing reservoir levels to new lows and management into crisis mode. The seven states that share the river have not been able to reach an agreement for how reservoirs will be operated and shortages will be shared after the current framework expires this year. The feds are poised to step in with their own management rules, but the actions they are allowed to legally take may not go far enough to keep the system from crashing.

Graphic credit: Aspen Journalism

An invisible pool

Berggrenโ€™s paper lays out a surplus pool that would be flexible and โ€œoperationally neutral,โ€ and would be separate from the rest of the stored water in both reservoirs. That means it wouldnโ€™t count toward calculations of how much water is in Lake Powell or Lake Mead for the purpose of determining how water shortages would be shared. 

There isnโ€™t a way to physically move water upstream, but according to WRA, water could be transferred between reservoirs through adjustments to dam releases and careful accounting. A pool could be โ€œmovedโ€ from Mead to Powell by holding back water in Powell. It could be moved back to Mead by increasing releases from Powell.

The concept paper does not advocate for taking such actions this year, presenting them as a potential strategy to be used under a new river management framework that is being hashed out between the states that share the river and the federal government.

โ€œThere are a lot of concerns about operational neutrality, but weโ€™re trying to show that itโ€™s actually not that scary and can provide benefit with less risk than the current options,โ€ Berggren said.

Reservoir levels in Mead currently determine how deep cuts to the Lower Basin states are; as Mead is drawn down, it triggers deeper cuts. Some water experts have said the ICS pool allows Lower Basin water users to game the system. By leaving their water in the ICS pool, it keeps reservoir levels artificially high and lets water users avoid taking deeper cuts. If the ICS pool had remained separate from the rest of Lake Mead, shortage triggers and mandatory conservation would have happened earlier. 

Making this pool โ€œoperationally neutral,โ€ or invisible to reservoir operations, fixes this issue.

In a proposal submitted to the federal government May 1, the Lower Basin states expressed support for this concept, but they did not lay out a plan to implement it. 

โ€œThe goal is to achieve operational neutrality of ICS,โ€ the submittal reads. โ€œThe Lower Division States will continue to determine when and how to convert ICS to operational neutrality at higher elevations in Lake Mead.โ€ 

They also said the long-term goal is to create an operationally neutral common pool of new water savings to be strategically deployed at low elevations to help delay and offset additional reductions to the Lower Basin. 

Some experts say there are concerns and unanswered questions about these types of pools. The dividing line where water delivery is measured from the Upper Basin (Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming) to the Lower Basin is Lee Ferry, just downstream of Lake Powell. Water measured at this location determines whether the Upper Basin remains in compliance with the 1922 Colorado River Compact. Moving water between reservoirs would have to deal with this issue.

โ€œYou would just have to agree on the rules of when is it considered a delivery at Lee Ferry and when isnโ€™t it a delivery at Lee Ferry,โ€ said Colorado River expert and author Eric Kuhn.

Another problem is that removing the ICS pool from reservoir accounting would leave a 3.2-million-acre-foot hole in Lake Mead that would need to be filled. 

โ€œItโ€™s hard to get there because there isnโ€™t a way to make ICS operationally neutral unless you impose the shortages that would occur if the ICS werenโ€™t there,โ€ said Kathryn Sorensen, director of research and professor of practice at the Kyl Center for Water Policy at Arizona State University. โ€œI donโ€™t know how else you can do it. You have to pay the piper.โ€

The infamous bathtub ring around Lake Mead can be seen in this photo of the intakes at Hoover Dam in December 2021. A conservation organization says flexible pools could be used to โ€œmoveโ€ water from Lake Mead to Lake Powell, where water levels could be critically low this year.ย  CREDIT:ย HEATHER SACKETT/ASPEN JOURNALISM

Lower Basin proposal

Last week, the Lower Basin states submitted a proposal to Reclamation to operate the reservoirs through 2028 that includes more conservation. This short-term deal could provide a temporary fix while states continue to hammer out a long-term strategy to share the river. 

The Lower Basin states are proposing to cut another 700,000 acre-feet of water per year through 2028, on top of the 1.5 million acre-feet they had already promised. California and Arizona will each take another 300,000 acre-feet of cuts and Nevada will take a cut of 100,000 acre-feet. The proposal does not include any mandatory conservation from the Upper Basin. 

โ€œIt was a monumental undertaking in a very short time frame to come up with all of this,โ€ said JB Hamby, Californiaโ€™s lead negotiator. โ€œWe need a bridge to the future, and we welcome and look forward to an opportunity for a full seven-state deal where all states are part of the solution.โ€

The Lower Basin proposal also says that this yearโ€™s release from Flaming Gorge to prop up Powell should be as close to the maximum amount of Reclamationโ€™s range of 1 million acre-feet as possible. The proposal also calls for increasing releases from Lake Powell if hydrology and projected reservoir levels improve.

โ€œThe intent under improved hydrology is to share the benefits of improved hydrology between both basins,โ€ the proposal reads. 

Coloradoโ€™s negotiator, Becky Mitchell, said in a prepared statement that the Lower Basinโ€™s proposal for water-use reductions is a good first step but they still call for too much water to be released out of Lake Powell and other Upper Basin reservoirs.

โ€œThe Lower Division Statesโ€™ proposal would also drain the Upstream Initial Units with limited opportunities for recovery,โ€ Mitchellโ€™s statement reads. โ€œLake Powell should properly be viewed as a savings account for the Lower Basin: The Lower Basinโ€™s own resiliency depends upon it. The entire Basin should support sustainable, supply-driven operations at Lake Powell that rebuild storage.โ€

Upper Basin officials have proposed a mediator to help move the needle on talks about future management to try to get to a seven-state deal.

Berggren said that although the concept of a flexible, floating pool doesnโ€™t solve the basic supply-and-demand problem on the Colorado River, itโ€™s still an important tool for future management. 

โ€œThere are a bunch of other things needed, including Lower Basin users and Upper Basin users using less water overall,โ€ Berggren said. โ€œThis is just one component. But it helps provide some benefit in dry years like this one.โ€

Congress is gunning for a national monument in #Utah — Scott Braden (writersontherange.org)

Click the link to read the article on the Writers on the Range website (Scott Braden):

May 18, 2026

In backcountry first aid, the rapid assessment of someone injured was for years summed up by the ABCs: check the patientโ€™s airway, breathing and circulation. A new priority has since been added: stop life-threatening bleeding as quickly as possible.

That approach is relevant for those of us working to protect public lands as we confront the equivalent of a massive hemorrhage. It is Congressโ€™ unconstrained use of the Congressional Review Act (CRA) to destroy management plans that were thoughtfully considered and years in the making.

With only simple majority votes required in each chamber of Congress, bypassing committee review and without the Senateโ€™s 60-vote filibuster, management plans that involved extensive public participation are being thrown out.

The CRA has already been used to undo six resource management plans and one mining prohibition. What replaces these plans is unclear and has plunged public land managers, local communities and even industry into uncertainty that will linger for years.

Pose Lake. By R27182818 at the English-language Wikipedia, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3069673

Last month, Congress used the CRA to remove protections against mining for roughly 225,000 acres at the headwaters of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness. This was a major blow to the watershed of Americaโ€™s most visited wilderness and a grim moment for conservationists. Now, the focus has shifted to Utah.

Senator Mike Lee and Rep. Celeste Maloy, both Utah Republicans, have introduced joint resolutions to undo the management plan for the 1.9-million-acre Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. When you think of Southern Utah, Grand Staircase-Escalante is at its heart; its vast landscape of canyons and mesas knits together Bryce Canyon and Capitol Reef national parks and the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area.

If this CRA resolution passes, it could devastate the monument, turning it into a place where out-of-control off-road vehicle use, landscape-level clearcutting, and other extractive activities would all be possible. 

The good news is that this fight is one that we, together, can win. When we do, it will set a precedent to protect all national monuments, national parks and beloved public lands that might be next in line.

In the House of Representatives, the ever-changing margins are razor thinโ€”just ask Republican Speaker Mike Johnson, who struggles with vote counts daily. In the Senate, Mike Lee has proved notorious for wasting valuable time with legislation that has little chance of passing.

We know these elected officials have been hearing from their constituents who are unhappy about their previous votes using the CRA. In both chambers, a growing list of Republicans find they need to bolster their public lands and environmental credentialsbefore the mid-terms.

Lee and Maloyโ€™s doomed efforts last year to sell off public lands proved highly unpopular nationwide and in Utah. Knowing that, members of Congress might want to think twice before tying themselves to the duoโ€™s latest attempts to weaken protection for Grand Staircase-Escalante.

At the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance, weโ€™re no stranger to an uphill battle. Ever since SUWA was founded in 1983, weโ€™ve sparred with Utahโ€™s anti-public-lands politicians, who show a level of disdain for our national heritage that seems bizarre in its tenacity. A deep-rooted belief that a federal public lands system simply should not exist seems to drive these politiciansโ€”defying logic, economic data and poll after poll.

Thatโ€™s why we are not shy about asking people outside of Utah to join us in speaking up for protecting public lands in Utah. Public lands belong to all Americans, and every day, we urge people across the country to tell their elected officials to speak up for public lands, Indigenous sacred sites and intact ecosystems in Utahโ€”because our politicians wonโ€™t.

Scott Braden

This is the moment to urge members of Congress to vote โ€œnoโ€ on the Grand Staircase-Escalante CRA resolution. A vote could be coming anytime in the next few weeks. Time is of the essence.  

To make the case, everyone who cares about the magnificent red-rock canyons of Grand Staircase-Escalante and Southern Utah needs to act now. The more our voices are raised and registered, the stronger our message urging Congress to listen to the people who want protection and stewardship, not short-term exploitation of our public land.

Scott Braden is a contributor to Writers on the Range, writersontherange.org, an independent nonprofit dedicated to spurring lively conversation about the West. He is the executive director of the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance (SUWA).

The Antiquities Act of 1906 was signed into law by Theodore Roosevelt, for โ€œโ€ฆ the protection of objects of historic and scientific interestโ€ through the designation of national monuments by the President and Congress. National monuments are one of the types of specially-designated areas that make up the BLMโ€™s National Conservation Lands. Some of the earliest national monuments included Devils Tower, the Grand Canyon, and Death Valley. They were initially protected by the War Department, then later by the National Park Service. More recently, the BLM and other Federal agencies have retained stewardship responsibilities for national monuments on public lands. In fact, the BLM manages more acres of national monuments in the continental U. S. than any other agency. This includes the largest land-based national monument, the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument in Utah featured here. National monuments under the BLMโ€™s stewardship have yielded numerous scientific discoveries, ranging from fossils of previously unknown dinosaurs to new theories about prehistoric cultures. They provide places to view some of Americaโ€™s darkest night skies, most unique wildlife, and treasured archaeological resources. In total, twenty BLM-managed national monuments, covering over five million acres, are found throughout the western U. S. and offer endless opportunities for discovery. Photos and description by Bob Wick, BLM.

Parker Dam: A crucial but often overlooked part of the Colorado River system

A concrete dam structure curved along a body of water, with visible gates and mountains in the background under a clear blue sky.
Parker Dam image from TripAdvisor. Photographed by WIBYRIC @he_wanders_off

Parker Dam is the exact geographic “fork in the road” for Southwest water distribution. It acts as the forebay for two of the most critical aqueducts in the United States. The Colorado River Aqueduct which is managed by the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, which pumps water 242 miles west to Los Angeles and San Diego. And the Central Arizona Project which pumps water 336 miles east to supply Phoenix and Tucson.1

Lake Havasu is a dynamic environment that’s impacted by upstream agricultural drainage, mineral springs, and fluctuating flows from Hoover Dam, and so salinity can spike rapidly. Hourly monitoring allows Bureau of Reclamation technicians to provide real-time telemetry data to MWD and CAP so they can adjust their treatment facilities or blending ratios before millions of gallons of highly saline water enter their pipelines.2

If the Total Dissolved Solids (TDS) levels of water tested at Parker Dam are too high, it could set off a cascading economic, industrial, and agricultural crisis across California and Arizona. TDS is the combined concentration of minerals, salts, metals, and small organic substances dissolved in water. That includes common minerals like calcium, magnesium, sodium, potassium, and bicarbonates, as well as chloride, sulfate, nitrate, trace metals such as copper, zinc, and sometimes contaminants like pesticides or industrial byproducts.3

The Effects of high TDS for Residential Water Users

High TDS typically means “hard” and corrosive water. If Parker Dam passed high-salinity water into the aqueducts, it would cause the buildup of scale in home appliances, water heaters, and municipal pipes across Los Angeles, San Diego, and Phoenix. Scale can drastically reduce the lifespans of home appliances, clog plumbing infrastructure, and degrade household water filters. It forces MWD and local utilities to incur massive financial costs to blend Colorado River water with lower-salinity northern water sources just to make it palatable and safe for home use.4

The Effects of high TDS for Agricultural Water Users

Water from Parker Dam also feeds the massive agricultural hubs of the Imperial and Coachella Valleys, as well as Yuma, Arizona. Irrigation water that’s high in salt acts as a silent killer for crops like alfalfa, lettuce, and citrus fruits. High salt content alters soil chemistry, lowering overall crop yields and burning plant roots. It forces farmers to use significantly more water just to “flush” the accumulated salts out of the root zones, compounding the West’s water scarcity issues.5

Colorado River salinity requirements for Water that flows into Mexico

IBWC Minute 242 regulates Colorado River salinity by requiring that water delivered to Mexico at Morelos Dam has an annual average salinity no more than 115 parts per million (ppm), with a plus or minus 30 ppm variance, above that of the water at Imperial Dam. This comparative standard ensures water quality by preventing high-salinity agricultural drainage from being added before crossing the border. Detailed information on this treaty can be found on the International Boundary and Water Commission website.6

Becky Mitchell delivers strong message on #ColoradoRiver — Joe Stone (HeartOfTheRockiesRadio.com) #COriver #aridification

As the keynote speaker at the Arkansas River Basin Water Forum in Salida, Upper Colorado River Commissioner Rebecca Mitchell spoke about the Colorado River crisis and water-use negotiations among the seven Colorado River Basin states. Photo credit: Joe Stone/Heart of the Rockies Radio

Click the link to read the article on the Heart of the Rockies Radio website (Joe Stone):

May 16, 2026

As the keynote speaker at the Arkansas River Basin Water Forum in Salida, Upper Colorado River Commissioner Rebecca Mitchell spoke about the Colorado River crisis and water-use negotiations among the seven Colorado River Basin states.

Following a warm winter with the lowest snowfall on record, Colorado faces a dire water-resource challenge. Mitchell acknowledged these unprecedented conditions and repeatedly avowed hydrologic reality in the Colorado River Basin as the basis for administering water use.

The 1922 Colorado River Compact governs water allocations in the Colorado Basin and delineates Upper Basin states โ€“ Wyoming, Utah, Colorado and New Mexico โ€“ and Lower Basin States โ€“ Nevada, Arizona and California. 

Negotiated during one of the Basinโ€™s wettest known climate patterns, the Compact allocates 7.5 million acre-feet of Colorado River water to the Upper Basin states. The Lower Basin allocation is 7.5 million acre-feet from the Upper Basin plus a million acre-feet from Lower Basin tributaries.

โ€œLetโ€™s look at the numbers,โ€ Mitchell said. โ€œEven in the most recent years โ€ฆ with reservoirs near the brinks of collapse,โ€ Lower Basin water use was almost 11 million acre-feet in 2021, 2.5 million acre-feet more than the Lower Basinโ€™s allocation. That overuse is based on โ€œa very flawed legal opinion,โ€ not science.

By contrast, the Upper Basin states cut usage by almost a million acre-feet from the previous year, using less than 4 million acre-feet, or 3.5 million acre-feet less than their allocation.

Mitchell also compared annual water flows into Lake Powell with the amount of water that the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation released from Lake Powell. โ€œSixteen out of 20 years, more water left Lake Powell than came in. That mass balance equation simply doesnโ€™t work.โ€

Those excessive water releases โ€œwere not tied to what was happening with hydrology,โ€ she said. โ€œThey were tied purely to the reservoir elevationsโ€ established by the 2007 Interim Guidelines โ€œand releases that were desired by the Lower Basin.โ€

Other numbers Mitchell cited include reservoir levels for recent years in which the Lower Basin states used more than their water allocations under the Compact.

In 2000, โ€œyou can see Powell is about 86% full. And you look at where we are in 2025, and weโ€™re predicted to be in an even worse situation at the end of this year. โ€ฆ This didnโ€™t work. You see a steady decline.โ€

The Interim Guidelines โ€œincentivized pulling down Meade so more water would come from Lake Powell. That put us in the situation that we are in today,โ€ Mitchell said. โ€œThese guidelines didnโ€™t respond to real world hydrology. They incentivized use โ€“ unsustainable use โ€ฆ and they prioritized one basin over the otherโ€ โ€“ i.e., the Lower Basin over the Upper Basin.

As a result, โ€œtwo countries are struggling. Forty million people are struggling. Thirty tribes havenโ€™t been at the table before this, (and they) deserve to be. This wasnโ€™t the way to get security for the Western United States.โ€

The solution, she emphasized, is having flexibility to adapt to changing conditions across the entire Colorado Basin by planning for variable operations. Coloradoโ€™s Prior Appropriation (Priority) System, embedded in the Colorado Constitution, requires that flexibility.

Coloradoโ€™s Priority System has produced a system of year-round real-time administration of water use based on legal priority.

โ€œYou all know the Priority System,โ€ Mitchell said. โ€œThere is a priority system in the Lower Basinโ€ that โ€œhas been used โ€ฆ yeah, zero times. โ€ฆ  

โ€œI think the truth is important, and facts are important. Science is important. โ€ฆ (The Lower Basinโ€™s) overuse essentially put us in the situation that we are in today. โ€ฆ Weโ€™re in this together. But we have to pivot to that.

โ€œAnd we have to engage the tribal nations and Mexico. We canโ€™t do this the way that we have done it before. โ€ฆ One user is not more important than the other users, one side of the Basin is not more important than the other side of the Basin.โ€

Upper Basin states, led by Colorado, have proposed multiple collaborative, science-based approaches to resolving the Colorado River crisis, but โ€œthe Lower Basin is coming up with yet another one of their own plans that involve our resources. โ€ฆ

โ€œTheyโ€™re irresponsible. Theyโ€™re not doing enough.โ€ Their rhetoric โ€œputs all of us at risk. And I think we have the responsibility to do better. โ€ฆ One of the things that weโ€™ve always done is really look at what we can do based on the resources that we have โ€“ the systems that we already work under.โ€

Mitchell insisted that the Upper Basin states had put on the table โ€œa generous rule curve of releases from Powellโ€ as well as upstream reservoirs like Blue Mesa and Flaming Gorge.

โ€œNow that we know a year like this is possible, we need to factor that in and be prepared for that. โ€ฆ We have to figure out how do we save in the good years so we can get through the years like this year? โ€ฆ

โ€œI was just in Grand Junction. I had grown men come to me crying. They know this year is going to suck. Literally. And if we donโ€™t acknowledge that as part of our path forward, then weโ€™re really not acknowledging who we are, and weโ€™re also not acknowledging what needs to be done.โ€

Udall/Overpeck 4-panel Figure Colorado River temperature/precipitation/natural flows with trend. Lake Mead and Lake Powell storage. Updated through Water Year 2025. Note the tiny points on the annual data so that you can flyspeck the individual years. Credit: Brad Udall

#Snowpack news May 18, 2026

Westwide SNOTEL basin-filled map May 17, 2026.
SNOTEL basin-filled map May 17, 2026.

The St. Vrain and Left Hand Water Conservancy District Reaches Agreement with Save the Worldโ€™s Rivers on Future Use of Coffintop Water Rights — Sean Cronin #SaintVrainCreek #SouthPlatteRiver

Coffintop Location Map. Credit: `

Here’s the release from the St. Vrain and Left Hand Water Conservancy District (Sean Cronin):

April 20, 2026

Agreement affirms no new on-river dam while preserving valuable water rights for community benefit

The St. Vrain and Left Hand Water Conservancy District has reached an agreement with Save the Worldโ€™s Rivers that reaffirms a new path forward for its Coffintop Reservoir water rightsโ€”one that does not include construction of a large on-river dam.

The District was created in 1971, in part, to build Coffintop Reservoir on South St. Vrain Creek west of Longmont and upstream of Lyons, through a planned partnership with the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. While the reservoir itself was never built, two water storage rights associated with the Coffintop Reservoir project remain legally valid today.

As a governmental entity, the District holds the Coffintop Reservoir water rights not for its own benefit but for the communityโ€™s. In 2024, as required under Colorado water law, the District filed a routine six-year diligence application in water court to maintain those rights. The filing prompted an environmental group, Save the Worldโ€™s Rivers, to submit a statement of opposition, opening discussions between the two organizations about the future use of the Coffintop water rights.

โ€œThe Water Court process is complex, and at the onset we were uncertain what Save the Worldโ€™s Rivers hoped to achieve through it,โ€ said Sean Cronin, the Districtโ€™s Executive Director.

โ€œWe are always watching proponents of dams,โ€ said Gary Wockner, Executive Director of Save the Worldโ€™s Rivers. โ€œAt the appropriate time, we seek to identify ways proponents can achieve their mission while not creating a new dam. We were generally aware of the good work being done by the District, but concerned about their plan to build Coffintop Reservoir and dam.โ€

Through dialogue, the District and Save the Worldโ€™s Rivers found common ground. Cronin noted, โ€œI met with Gary several times, and I gained respect for his organizationโ€™s objectives, and I appreciated his willingness to come to the table and talk through complicated issues.โ€ Save the Worldโ€™s Rivers learned that the District had been working for more than 10 years with the City of Longmont, Town of Lyons, Boulder County Parks and Open Space, local environmental organizations, and food producers to develop a strategy to best utilize the Coffintop Reservoir water rights โ€“ without building the actual reservoir.

The District and Save the Worldโ€™s Rivers reached an agreement through the court process, under which the District agreed to forgo using the Coffintop Reservoir water rights for any new on-river reservoir, including Coffintop Reservoir, and for the expansion of any existing on-river reservoir. Instead, the District will return to water court with plans to use the water rights at alternative locations and in ways that align with community needs, and environmental and water management goals.

โ€œIt became clear through discussions that the District shared values around avoiding a new on-river dam while still meeting its mission,โ€ said Wockner. โ€œThat made an agreement possible,โ€ Wockner said.

District leaders emphasized that the water rights are held for public benefit and that the original Coffintop Reservoir concept no longer reflects the highest and best use of the resource.

โ€œThis is something we and our communities have contemplated for decades,โ€ said Christopher Smith, President of the Districtโ€™s Board of Directors. โ€œThe Coffintop project, as envisioned more than 50 years ago, no longer fits todayโ€™s needs or values.โ€

For more than a decade, the District has worked with community partners to explore alternatives that could use the Coffintop water rights, while also supporting increased stream flows during low-flow periods. The District’s development and implementation of these alternatives is moving forward with engagement from important partners, including the Town of Lyons and City of Longmont.

Town of Lyons Mayor Hollie Rogan welcomed the agreement. โ€œSt. Vrain Creek is the lifeblood of our town, and a large dam upstream was never embraced by our community,โ€ she said. โ€œWeโ€™re pleased the District will not pursue Coffintop Reservoir and look forward to continued collaboration.โ€

Longmont Director of Water and Waste Service Chris Huffer noted the long history between the City and the District. โ€œThe challenges around water have only grown more complex over the last 50 years,โ€ he said. โ€œThe District has a solid water plan, and the City is an eager partner in realizing the greatest potential of these water rights.โ€

The South Platte River Basin is shaded in yellow. Source: Tom Cech, One World One Water Center, Metropolitan State University of Denver.

The April 2026 briefing is hot off the presses from Western Water Assessment

Click the link to read the assessment on the Western Water Assessment website:

May 13, 2026 – CO, UT, WY

The region generally experienced drier conditions east of the Continental Divide, and wetter conditions west of the Divide in April. Temperatures were near to above average for most of the region. As of May 1, statewide percent median SWE was 18% in Colorado, 22% in Utah, and 44% in Wyoming. Regional streamflow volume forecasts are below to much below average, with 13% of average inflow forecasted for Lake Powell. Drought conditions cover 99% of the region as of April 28. ENSO forecasts predict an 88% chance of El Niรฑo conditions developing during May-July and continuing through the end of 2026.

Regional precipitation was variable in April, ranging from below average conditions in eastern Colorado and much of Wyoming to above average conditions in western Colorado, much of Utah, and south-central Wyoming. Much below average April precipitation occurred in eastern Colorado, northwestern Utah, and eastern and western Wyoming, with large pockets of less than 25% of average conditions in southeastern Colorado and southeastern Wyoming into northeastern Colorado. Record-dry conditions occurred in southeastern and northeastern Colorado, and southeastern Wyoming. Record-wet conditions occurred in Carbon County, Utah.

Regional temperatures were near to above average in April. Much of Colorado, Utah, and southern and western Wyoming experienced 2-4ยฐF above average temperatures, with pockets of 4-6ยฐF above average temperatures along the northern and southern Front Range of Colorado, and in eastern Colorado. A few pockets of 2 to 4ยฐF below average temperatures occurred in northwestern and southeastern Wyoming, and one pocket in southwestern Utah, and one area of 4 to 6ยฐF below average temperatures occurred in Platte County, Wyoming.

Below to much below normal snow-water equivalent (SWE) continues throughout the region as of May 1. All river basins in Colorado, Utah, and eastern Wyoming observed 50% or less of normal SWE. The only river basins with above 50% of normal SWE were in western Wyoming, including the Yellowstone (88%), Shoshone (67%), Big Horn (60%), Madison (56%), Tongue (54%), and Upper Green (53%) River Basins. The Dolores River Basin in Colorado and the Dirty Devil and Escalante River Basins in Utah have melted out as of May 1. As of May 1, statewide percent median SWE was 18% in Colorado, 22% in Utah, and 44% in Wyoming. Peak SWE was observed on March 12 for Colorado (51% of median peak), March 9 for Utah (52% of median peak), and March 17 for Wyoming (69% of median peak)

Seasonal streamflow volume forecasts for all river basins in the region are below to much below average. In Colorado, seasonal streamflow volume forecasts suggest 20-40% of average runoff for all major river basins. In Utah, seasonal streamflow volume forecasts suggest 10-40% of average runoff for all major river basins. In Wyoming, streamflow forecasts were more variable, with a near average forecast for the Shoshone River Basin (91%), below average forecasts for the Yellowstone (81%), Snake (66%), Tongue (60%), Cheyenne (56%), and Powder (55%) River Basins, and forecasts below 50% of average in the remaining major river basins. Much below average inflow is forecasted for many regional reservoirs, including Flaming Gorge (39%), Boysen (37%), Deer Creek (36%), Navajo (27%), McPhee (27%), Blue Mesa (27%), Guernsey (23%), and Lake Powell (13%).

Regional drought coverage increased during April and covered 99% of the region by April 28 (drought covered 93% of the region on March 31). Drought conditions deteriorated in Colorado, where moderate (D1) drought now covers the entire state, severe (D2) drought coverage increased by 25%, and extreme (D3) drought coverage increased by 10%. In Utah, D1 drought still covers the entire state, and D2 drought coverage increased by 10%. In Wyoming, D1 drought coverage increased by 6%, D2 drought coverage increased by 17%, and D3 drought coverage increased by 5%. Exceptional (D4) drought coverage decreased by 4% in the West Slope of Colorado.

As of mid-April, the equatorial Pacific Ocean was in an ENSO-neutral state but is rapidly transitioning toward El Niรฑo. ENSO forecasts predict an 88% chance of El Niรฑo conditions developing during May-July and continuing through the end of 2026. NOAA monthly forecasts for May suggest an increased probability for below average precipitation in Wyoming and above average temperatures for the entire region, particularly in northern Utah and western Wyoming. NOAA seasonal forecasts for May-July suggest an increased probability for below average precipitation in Wyoming, northern Utah, and northern Colorado, and above average precipitation in southern Colorado. Above average temperatures are forecasted throughout the region, particularly in Utah and southwestern Wyoming.

Significant weather event: Hammer Fire.ย The Hammer Fire started on April 22 in El Paso County near the community of Hanover, Colorado, southeast of Colorado Springs. There were extreme fire conditions on April 22, with strong winds and very low humidity, causing the fire to grow quickly. Mandatory evacuations were issued for nearby residents, and schools were closed in Hanover School District 28. The fire started in the afternoon and rapidly grew from 200 acres to over 4,000 acres within hours due to the strong wind gusts that day. The wildfire was contained on April 24 and burned approximately 4,958 acres, making it the second-largest wildfire in Colorado in 2026, only behind the 24 Fire that burned 7,404 acres from March 18-April 2 southwest of Colorado Springs.

#Severe #ColoradoRiver #drought leads to water releases from Upper Basin reservoirs and reduced flows from #LakePowell — #Aspen Public Radio #COriver #aridification

May 1, 2026 seasonal water supply forecast summary.

Click the link to read the article on the Aspen Public Radio website (Caroline Llanes). Here’s an excerpt:

May 20, 2026

Reclamationย announcedย on April 17 that it would release between 600-thousand and one million acre feet of water from Flaming Gorge Reservoir on the Wyoming-Utah state line over the course of the next year. In addition, Reclamation will reduce the amount of water it sends from Lake Powell through Glen Canyon Dam, decreasing flows downstream through the Grand Canyon and into Lake Mead. Through September 2026, the agency will reduce its annual release volume from about 7.5 million acre feet of water to just 6 million acre feet.

Upper Colorado River Basin Snow Water Equivalet and Total Percent Averages are from the 30 year average calculated from data between 10/01/1990 and 09/30/2020. Graphic credit: Water-Date.com

The drought contingency actions come in response to a water year that has been incredibly dire for the Western United States and the Colorado River Basin. Snowpack has been at record lows for much of the winter, which is bad news for a region that relies on snowmelt for much of its water use. The forecast for runoff into Lake Powell from the entire Upper Basin is forecast to be just 23% of normal. The agency estimates that these combined actions will boost Lake Powellโ€™s elevation by 54 feet over the course of the year, bringing it to 3,500 feet in April 2027.ย Currently, Lake Powellโ€™s elevation is about 3,528 feet. 3,490 feet is the elevation at which hydropower can no longer be produced at Glen Canyon Dam. Any lower, and water will not be able to enter the hydroelectric turbines. Instead, the water has to go through whatโ€™s called โ€œriver outlet works,โ€ which are tunnels that bypass the turbines to get the water downstream to the Colorado River. Seth Arens, a hydrologist at theย Western Water Assessment, said Glen Canyon Dam was not designed to have the river outlet works as the primary way to get water out of the reservoir.

The back of Glen Canyon Dam circa 1964, not long after the reservoir had begun filling up. Here the water level is above dead pool, meaning water can be released via the river outlets, but it is below minimum power pool, so water cannot yet enter the penstocks to generate electricity. Bureau of Reclamation photo. Annotations: Jonathan P. Thompson

Fire is transforming the Westโ€™s public lands — Kyle Manley (ColoradoNewsline.com)

An aerial view of the Cameron Peak Fire on Aug. 15, 2020. (inciweb.nwcg.gov/Cameron Peak Fire)

Click the link to read the article on the Colorado Newsline website (Kyle Manley):

May 14, 2026

Research shows thereโ€™s an overlooked cost toย recreation

This commentary was originally published by The Commentary.

Coloradoโ€™s two largest fires on record, the Cameron Peak and East Troublesome fires, burned hundreds of thousands of acres across some of the stateโ€™s most visited landscapes in 2020.

The fires scorched trails, campgrounds and beloved ecosystems in and around Rocky Mountain National Park and the Arapahoe and Roosevelt national forests.

More than five years later, the scars remain stark: blackened hillsides, closed trails and bare slopes where forests once stood. According to our recent research, which has not yet been peer reviewed, the fires caused significant and lasting declines in visitation at the burned sites.

Even after the 2020 fires, Rocky Mountain National Park attracted 4.2 million visitors in 2024, generating $862 million in economic output in local gateway communities such as Estes Park and Grand Lake. Rocky Mountain National Park is a significant contributor to the nearly 1 billion annual visits and $700 billion in spending that public lands generate nationwide as outdoor recreation continues to grow. It also supports a variety of important social values beyond the economy, including mental health and well-beingcultural and spiritual connection, and the sense of place that binds people to landscapes.

But these landscapes are changing fast. Wildfires are affecting our public lands at an accelerating scale and increasing intensity. Yet how fire affects recreation has remained poorly understood.

Thatโ€™s the question I set out to answer with an interdisciplinary team of researchers. As a scientist who studies the benefits nature provides to people and how those benefits are affected by climate change, I wanted to know whether fire is eroding one of the most recognized and valued benefits of nature: recreation.

Tracking visitation across burned landscapes

Our first challenge was gathering data about visits to these outdoor areas.

A handful of monitored public lands track visitor counts, but those counts can tell us only so much about how fires affect recreation. Wildfires often cross boundaries, for example from a national park into a national forest, and span dispersed remote areas where no one is monitoring visitation.

Alternatively, every time someone logs a hike on AllTrails, posts a nature photo to Flickr, reports a bird sighting on eBird or simply carries a phone into the backcountry, they leave a precise digital trace of where and when they spent time outdoors. We trained a visitation model on the on-site counts that do exist at monitored sites, using millions of these digital traces, alongside other recreation drivers such as weather, land cover and site characteristics, as predictors.

Across Colorado and California, this approach let us track visitation in burned areas across hundreds of wildfires and prescribed burns for years before and after each fire, even in the remote, unmonitored landscapes where most fires burn. But changes in visitation can have many causes, including weather, broader recreation trends, even pandemic effects. So we statistically paired each burned site with a very similar unburned site elsewhere on public lands. This let us measure not just what happened after each fire, but also what we could expect would have happened without it. The gap between those two is how fire actually affected recreation.

We found that itโ€™s not simply fire itself that drives people away, but a confluence of the type and severity of a fire, the ecosystem that burned and the social values connected to the fire-impacted landscape.

Wildfires that empty trails โ€“ and ones that donโ€™t

In Colorado, the average wildfire reduced visitation to burned sites by 8% in the year of the fire. Those declines never recovered to prefire levels for the five-year postfire period we tracked.

As fires grew larger and burned more intensely, recreational losses sharpened. Visitation dropped 15% to 20% at sites burned at higher severity. These declines lasted years. Take the Cameron Peak Fire, for example. The Arapaho and Roosevelt national forests typically see about 8 million visits a year. Our model estimates that the area burned in the Cameron Peak Fire drew nearly 500,000 visits annually before the fire. Applying our 15% to 20% average declines estimated for moderate- to high-severity wildfires, that translates to roughly 70,000 to 100,000 fewer trips annually, losses our analysis finds persist for years.

But these postfire recreational losses were largely concentrated in forested landscapes. Wildfires that occurred in grasslands, such as the southeastern Colorado Cherry Canyon Fire in 2020, by contrast, seemed to barely register with visitors. Visitation at these grassland-dominated burn sites showed essentially no change. This pattern reveals something important. Peopleโ€™s recreational responses to fire are not just about the physical damage and accessibility impacts. They reflect the particular relationships people hold with different landscapes. Grasses recover within a season or two, and the wide-open vistas that draw people to those landscapes remain intact, even after a fire.

Forests are different. The towering canopies, shaded trails and old-growth character that people value may take decades or centuries to return, if they return at all in a changing climate.

In California, our analysis reveals how these human-nature relationships also vary across regions, with much sharper and more persistent losses than in Colorado. Californian wildfires reduced visitation by 18% in the first year on average, and high-severity forest fires produced losses of 33% that showed no recovery five years after the fire. Californiaโ€™s fires tend to be significantly larger, more severe and more concentrated in forested landscapes.

However, small fires in California actually increased visitation by 8%. This suggests that after years of megafires, a small burn may barely register. Californians have grown accustomed to a fire-shaped landscape, and a modest fire scar may not be enough to keep them off the trails.

Prescribed fire tells a different story

As wildfire intensifies, land managers are responding by expanding prescribed fire programs. They are intentionally setting lower-intensity fires to clear out the dead trees, dry brush and accumulated debris built up from over a century of fire suppression that can feed catastrophic wildfires.

Current prescribed fire planning tends to focus on reducing fire suppression costs and protecting properties, as well as managing ecosystems by reducing fuel loads and improving wildlife habitat. But managers are scaling up these programs without knowing how prescribed fire affects the recreationists who visit these landscapes, a gap our analysis sets out to fill.

In Colorado, we found that on average prescribed fire actually increased visitation by about 8% in the year of the fire. This increase may reflect improved trail conditions, enhanced wildlife habitat that attracts birders and hunters, or positive public perceptions of proactive management.

In California, prescribed fire on average decreased visitation by about 3%. Crucially, in stark contrast to wildfire, impacts were short-lived, with visitation returning to prefire levels within three years in both states.

Beyond their direct effects on recreation, prescribed burns also reduce the likelihood of future extreme fires โ€“ the very fires that drive the largest and longest-lasting recreation declines.

Why this matters beyond fire

Some of the Colorado communities that are most dependent economically on recreation experienced the steepest visitation declines in the period we studied. These are towns such as Grand LakeDurango and Gunnison, where shops, hotels, restaurants and seasonal workers rely on a steady flow of visitors, and where sales tax from those visitors funds the infrastructure and daily life of the community. Persistent declines in visitation threaten the long-term viability of these places.

The implications run beyond fire. Calls to consider less tangible benefits of nature, such as recreation, into climate impact assessmentsextreme events research and conservation planning have grown recently. Turning those calls into action requires evidence that can help land managers make decisions. Our work provides some of that evidence for fire and a framework that can be used for other disturbances, such as floods and droughts. Without accounting for these less tangible values of nature, increasingly extreme climate impacts will keep eroding the experiences, livelihoods and connections that sustain the well-being of millions of Americans.

Read more of our stories about Colorado.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

East Troublesome Fire. Photo credit: Northern Water

A timelapse showing the incredible movement of a growing vine, exhibiting both nastic movement to find, and then a thigmotropic response to grasp and hold — @wonderofscience

#ColoradoRiver stakeholders ask Congress for $2 billion in emergency funds to address drought crisis — The #GlenwoodSprings Post Independent #COriver #aridification

“There’s not economic adjustments that the birds can make. A payout doesn’t help the birds that use those habitats.”โ€“โ€“Jennifer Pitt, Colorado River program director for Audubon. Photo credit: Morgan Sjogren — https://wildwords.substack.com

Click the link to read the article on the Glenwood Springs Post Independent website (Ali Longwell). Here’s an excerpt:

May 13, 2026

A coalition of organizations, tribes, utilities and governments from across the Colorado River basin is asking the federal government for at least $2 billion to address the near-term impacts of the escalating drought and water supply crisis in the West. 

โ€œWater Year 2026 is unfolding as one of the most challenging hydrologic years in more than a century of recordkeeping, with exceptionally low snowpack and river runoff and continued stress on an already depleted reservoir system,โ€ wrote the coalition. โ€œDifficult decisions around water supplies will be needed to address the severe shortages and operational risks that threaten the basin and the stability of the entire system.โ€

Theย letter was signedย by 70 groups that represent water users and interests in all seven states that comprise the Colorado River basin: Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, New Mexico, Arizona, California and Nevada. The river flows from its headwaters in Grand County down 1,450 miles to the Gulf of California in Mexico, providing water to nearly 40 million people across the seven states, two counties and the 30 tribal nations that fall within the basin. The newly-formed coalition asks Congress to find funding for additional resources to โ€œsustain and scaleโ€ the U.S. Bureau of Reclamationโ€™s existing drought mitigation investments needed to stabilize the system โ€œin a manner that ensures the Basin will do more than simply endure from crisis to crisis.โ€ It requests that the $2 billion be invested in tools that bolster conservation, efficiency and smart, targeted augmentation to develop new water supply sources.ย 

Aspen enters stage 3 water shortage — The #Aspen Daily News

The Aspen municipal golf course, which sits between Castle and Maroon creeks. CREDIT: BRENT GARDNER-SMITH/ASPEN JOURNALISM

Click the link to read the article on The Aspen Daily News website (Lucy Peterson). Here’s an excerpt:

May 13, 2026

The city of Aspen will enter a stage 3 water shortage for the first time since the city adopted a formal drought mitigation plan in 2020. The new restrictions will limit residential watering schedules even further. The Aspen City Council voted to declare a stage 3 water shortage during a meeting on Tuesday night, nearly eight months after it entered stage 2 water restrictions. The cityโ€™s drought response committee recommended the new restrictions because, since a stage 2 water shortage was declared, โ€œconditions within Aspen, the Maroon and Castle Creek drainages, and the Roaring Fork Valley have degraded significantly,โ€ according to a memo sent to the city council ahead of Tuesdayโ€™s [May 12, 2026] meeting. Irrigation will be restricted to two days per week. Water users with even home addresses can irrigate on Tuesdays and Fridays, while those with odd home addresses can irrigate on Wednesdays and Saturdays. No outdoor water use will be allowed between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m. New turf from seed or sod can be watered for up to 21 consecutive days after it is planted. Other new plants are allowed to be watered on the day they are planted. Residential swimming pools and hot tubs, and other existing water features cannot be filled or refilled using city water.

Map of the Roaring Fork River drainage basin in western Colorado, USA. Made using USGS data. By Shannon1 – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=69290878

New threats loom as Colorado River flows diminish

by Robert Marcos

As our attention is focused on the Colorado River’s diminished streamflow, there are other dangers lurking in the shadows.

As river flows diminish the total dissolved solids (TDS) it contains become more concentrated. And as that languid water heats up in the summertime cyanobacteria can bloom – which further degrades water quality. Cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) thrive in the Colorado River system when specific physical, chemical, and climatic conditions overlap. Major bodies along the basin, such as Lake Powell, Lake Havasu, and the Blue Mesa Reservoir, can experience rapid algae blooms under the following conditions:1

Thermal Thresholds Cyanobacteria growth accelerates significantly when water temperatures exceed 68ยฐF, outcompeting other harmless algae. Optimal growth rates typically occur at temperatures above 77ยฐF. The combination of intense summer heat and reduced snowpack runoff creates peak risk conditions from June through September.2

High Nutrient Loading: Excess agricultural fertilizer runoff – infused with phosphorus and nitrogen, livestock waste, and urban stormwater feed the bacteria.

Internal Loading: In deep reservoirs like Blue Mesa, oxygen-depleted bottom waters trigger the release of historical, sediment-bound phosphorus back into the water column.

Wildfire Aftermath: Runoff from regional burn scars carries massive loads of ash and nitrates directly into feeding tributaries.3

River Regulation: Major dams and impoundments artificially slow down river velocity.

Drought Depletion: Persistent droughts drop the total water volume, lengthening the hydraulic retention time. This gives the bacteria prolonged periods to multiply without being flushed downstream.4

Thermocline Barriers: Intense sunlight creates a distinct warm, less dense upper layer of water separated from the cold deeper water.

Buoyancy Advantage: Many harmful cyanobacteria types (like Microcystis) regulate their buoyancy. They rise to the calm, sunlit surface layer to trap light while exploiting the stable water column to form thick surface scums.5

Low Turbidity: When sediment settles in slow-moving sections or reservoirs, water clarity increases. Sunlight penetrates deeper into the water column, accelerating the photosynthetic replication of the bacteria.6

The threat presented by higher concentrations of TDS

Hydrologists are highly concerned about the increase in Total Dissolved Solids in the Colorado River because elevated salinity inflicts an estimated $350 million in annual economic damages across the Southwest. Driven by climate change, prolonged droughts, and agricultural runoff, rising TDS poses specific, localized threats:7

Agricultural Damage: High-salinity water reduces crop yields and stunts the growth of salt-sensitive crops like citrus, vegetables, and alfalfa grown in the Imperial and Coachella valleys.

Infrastructure & Municipal Costs: Salty water corrodes municipal water pipes, shortens the lifespan of residential water heaters and appliances, and burdens water treatment facilities with expensive reverse osmosis remediation.

International Obligations: High TDS levels complicate compliance with the 1944 Water Treaty, which dictates the quality and quantity of Colorado River water the United States must deliver to Mexico.

Ecological Degradation: Elevated salinity levels disrupt the delicate biological balance, negatively impacting native fish and aquatic habitats in the river basin.To manage these threats, the Colorado River Basin Salinity Control Forum implements ongoing watershed management and mitigation programs to intercept salts before they reach the river system.8

To manage these threats, the Colorado River Basin Salinity Control Forum implements ongoing watershed management and mitigation programs to intercept salts before they reach the river system.9

As a #Colorado Aquifer Runs Low, Dangerous Heavy Metals Threaten Rural Communitiesโ€™ Drinking Water — Emily Payne (InsideClimateNews.org) #SanLuisValley #RioGrande

Anna Vargas, of Manassa, Colorado, is a sixth-generation resident of the San Luis Valley who is deeply embedded in local water management initiatives. She hasnโ€™t drunk her own tap water in years out of fear of contamination. Credit: Jacob Spetzler/Inside Climate News

Click the link to read the article on the Inside Climate News website (Emily Payne):

May 8, 2026

In the San Luis Valley, the ongoing megadrought and a record-low snowpack are draining groundwater and increasing its concentrations of toxic metals. There are few protections for residents drinking from private wells.

Julie Zahringer hears a common refrain at her environmental laboratory in Alamosa, Colorado: A customer has been drinking well water on family land where theyโ€™ve lived for years, but recently noticed it has changed. They want to know why.

โ€œAll of a sudden it looks different, tastes different, thereโ€™s odor, thereโ€™s color,โ€ said Zahringer.

Zahringerโ€™s SDC Laboratory is one of the few testing water in the San Luis Valley, an 8,000-square-mile, high-altitude desert in south-central Colorado. She has tested thousands of wells during more than 30 years in the field.

Residents of the valley, which has large Hispanic populations and a high poverty rate, have been concerned about naturally occurring heavy metals in their water for decades, she said. But in the past five years, the rate of change has accelerated.

โ€œEvery year it just seems like this is the climax of it, and the next year, it gets worse,โ€ said Zahringer. โ€œThis year, weโ€™re looking at probably the worst as far as water quality.โ€

San Luis Valley Groundwater

The San Luis Valley relies on surface water from the Rio Grande and a massive aquifer system, one of the largest in North America, to drive its agricultural economy. But the aquifer is severely overallocated, losing an estimated 1.2 million acre-feet of water between 1976, when tracking began, and 2013โ€”equivalent to more than five times what the city of Denver consumes each year. This year, the aquifer could hit another record low, as Coloradoโ€™s snowpack, which recharges the stateโ€™s aquifers, is at the lowest level since record-keeping began in 1941.

San Luis, CO – MAY 5, 2026: The sun sets over agriculture fields in San Luis, Colorado on Tuesday, May 5, 2026. The primary agriculture in the valley are potatoes and livestock. The Rio Grande recharges the aquifer which is the source of water for the entire San Luis Valley, including agriculture, which is the industry which economically sustains the area. The amount of water necessary for large scale agriculture is also the primary reason for the aquiferโ€™s depletion. (Photo by Jacob Spetzler/Special to Inside Climate News)
Manassa, CO – MAY 5, 2026: A water control gate controls flow in an irrigation ditch in Manassa, Colorado on Tuesday, May 5, 2026. (Photo by Jacob Spetzler/Special to Inside Climate News)

Researchers are finding that as groundwater levels drop, the remaining water can contain higher concentrations of carcinogenic heavy metals.

The valleyโ€™s well water users, many of them in historically underserved communities, are increasingly concerned about whatโ€™s in their drinking water. But with little governmental oversight of private wells or resources to help track and manage quality, they have few options to make it safe.

Shifting Chemistry 

Anna Vargas, a sixth-generation resident of the San Luis Valley, remembers making snowmen often as a child, and her mother talking about the daily rains during the summer monsoon season. Now, monsoon season barely exists here, Vargas said.

โ€œAs the years have gone by, thereโ€™s less rain, less snowfall. Iโ€™ve lived in the valley long enough to see the changes in weather patterns,โ€ says Vargas, project manager with the SLV Ecosystem Council. โ€œWe depend a lot on snowpack, and we have hardly any this year. Itโ€™s concerning for all of us in the Rio Grande basinโ€ฆThe heavy metals will just become more concentrated.โ€ 

Map of the San Luis Valley

Heavy metals like arsenic, tungsten, uranium, manganese and selenium occur naturally in rocks and soils and come up with groundwater that is pumped to the surface. With drought, Zahringer said, they can become a problem.

โ€œWeโ€™re not seeing a dilution of any of the contaminantsโ€ฆso anything thatโ€™s in the geologic makeup is just really concentrating,โ€ said Zahringer, whose tests have documented contaminant levels rising in the wells during dry periods.

Alamosa, CO – MAY 5, 2026: Julie Zahringer, owner and laboratory director of the Sangre de Cristo (SDC) Laboratory, poses for a portrait in her office in Alamosa, Colorado on Tuesday, May 5, 2026. The SDC Laboratory is the only source of water testing in the San Luis Valley. The company tests water for both private well owners and municipalities as well as water used in agriculture. (Photo by Jacob Spetzler/Special to Inside Climate News)

In addition, as aquifer levels drop during droughtsโ€”and due to overpumpingโ€”its geochemistry shifts, says Kathy James, Ph.D., associate professor with the Colorado School of Public Health. Users reaching deeper into the ground to access the remaining water can draw small amounts of water connected to geothermal sources or underground reservoirs of hot water, which can have high arsenic concentrations, into the drinking supply. Even in small amounts, this can increase arsenic concentrations to dangerous levels. James notes that these relationships are complex and non-linear, however, and additional research is needed.

This year, James led a study finding that up to one in four private wells producing drinking water in the San Luis Valley contain elevated levels of heavy metals like arsenic and uranium.

Zahringerโ€™s estimates mirror these results: Of all the well waters her lab tests in southern Colorado, about 25 percent exceed the U.S. Environmental Protection Agencyโ€™s maximum contaminant level for arsenic in drinking water

And โ€œthatโ€™s just going up,โ€ Zahringer said.

Unanswered Questions

Exposure to arsenic in drinking water is linked to cancer, cardiovascular disease and diabetes, and can impair childrenโ€™s cognitive development. Jamesโ€™s previous research also found that long-term exposure to low levels of arsenic can increase the risk of coronary heart disease.

Other studies have shown that both uranium and arsenic in irrigation water can stunt crop growth and accumulate in plants, compounding public health risk through the food supply.

Zahringer said that some customers come to her lab on referrals from their primary care physicians trying to determine the root cause of elevated levels of heavy metals in their bloodstream. Her own well water is high in arsenic, but her filtration system thoroughly treats it before it enters her house.

โ€œIโ€™m in a unique situation where Iโ€™m educated and vigilant, and I have the resources to test and make sure itโ€™s OK,โ€ said Zahringer. โ€œA lot of my neighbors, I know theyโ€™re just drinking it right out of the ground.โ€

Half of the U.S. population relies on groundwater for drinking, irrigation, industry and livestock. Much of it is pumped through public water systems, which must limit contaminants to comply with the federal Safe Drinking Water Act, in addition to state requirements that may be more stringent. But private wells, which are the main source of drinking water for 15 percent of Americans and about a third of San Luis Valley residents, are not regulated or monitored. In effect, about 51 million Americans are responsible for monitoring the safety of their own drinking water.

In the San Luis Valley, residents are asking more questions about how their water is impacting their health, crops and cattle, Vargas said, making it easy for her to recruit some of the more than 800 private well owners involved in Jamesโ€™s study. 

โ€œWe filled it up so fast that that just shows how much the community members wanted their wells tested,โ€ says Vargas.

After a few months of recruiting, the study group was nearly at capacity.

Later, neighbors would stop her at the grocery store to tell her about their results: manganese, arsenic, uranium or other contaminants were often above the EPA thresholds. 

Today, many residents in Vargasโ€™s community have turned to bottled water. โ€œThey just donโ€™t know if they can drink the water,โ€ she said.

Climate Justice

With the ongoing megadrought and this yearโ€™s record-low snowpack in Colorado, small communities, private well owners and municipal water systems alike will struggle to keep up with changing groundwater supply, Zahringer said. Researchers estimate that U.S. drought conditions could expose roughly 1 in 10 well-water users to unsafe arsenic levels.

โ€œAs those contaminants are increasing, we are going to start to see these rural areas really canโ€™t afford these treatment plants and mitigation for it,โ€ said Zahringer. โ€œWeโ€™re dealing with a lot of really small communities that are really struggling to pay for their water testing, let alone to build these new plants.โ€

San Luis Valley is one of the poorest rural areas of Colorado, with an estimated 21.4 percent poverty rate. Even if well users can access a water test, consistent filtration remains an economic burden.

San Luis, CO – MAY 5, 2026: Water from a natural spring pours out of a pipe in the town of San Luis in the San Luis Valley, Colorado on Tuesday, May 5, 2026. (Photo by Jacob Spetzler/Special to Inside Climate News)
San Luis, CO – MAY 5, 2026: The town of San Luis in the San Luis Valley, Colorado on Tuesday, May 5, 2026. (Photo by Jacob Spetzler/Special to Inside Climate News)

Household reverse osmosis systems can remove up to 99 percent of contaminants, including arsenic. But they are expensiveโ€”often costing thousands of dollars to install and hundreds more annually to maintainโ€”and can waste up to 80 percent of the water that passes through them. And because the San Luis Valley has moderately to extremely hard water, compounds and metals accumulate much faster on filtration systems, requiring replacement more than twice as frequently as in areas with soft water. 

โ€œI come from a rural and impoverished community, and my community members canโ€™t always be changing out these filters for this reverse osmosis filtration system,โ€ Vargas said.

Researchers at Arizona State University are planning to field test a new type of filter that removes a range of heavy metals from hard water systems without losing water in hopes of providing more accessible water quality mitigation for residents. Alireza Farsad, a postdoctoral research scholar at ASU who founded AmorPH2O, the company developing the filter, expects it to be commercially available next year.

Meanwhile, Vargas and James have presented the water quality study results to local county commissioners and talked with state lawmakers about the increasing concentrations of heavy metals. 

But, for now, the issue has seen little action beyond testing. 

San Luis, CO – MAY 5, 2026: Shirley Romero Otero, a local activist and teacher poses for a portrait in town of San Luis, Colorado on Tuesday, May 5, 2026. As an educator and activist Romero Otero has spent decades organizing for land and water rights in the San Luis Valley. (Photo by Jacob Spetzler/Special to Inside Climate News)

For Shirley Romero Otero, a local educator and activist who helped implement Jamesโ€™s study, water quality in the San Luis Valley is an issue of environmental justice. She says the valley, home to the stateโ€™s largest native Hispanic population, is often left out of policymaking conversations.

โ€œThose folks in Denver that make those decisions for testing and resources need to pay attentionโ€ฆWe are part of Colorado. We should have equality when it comes to testing and finding out what the hell is really going on,โ€ says Otero, who lives in San Luis, the stateโ€™s oldest continuously occupied town, which has fewer than 600 residents.

โ€œRegardless of socioeconomic status, political affiliation or racial geographic areas, water is the most precious resource that we have. It is the lifeblood of every community. You donโ€™t have water, you die. Itโ€™s that simple.โ€

San Luis , CO – MAY 5, 2026: An acequia flows into San Luis, Colorado on Tuesday, May 5, 2026. Acequias are traditional community-managed irrigation ditches that channel water from rivers and streams to farms and towns. (Photo by Jacob Spetzler/Special to Inside Climate News)

Feds seek short-term fixes on #ColoradoRiver, leaving #Arizona in limbo — AZCentral.com #COriver #aridification

Udall/Overpeck 4-panel Figure Colorado River temperature/precipitation/natural flows with trend. Lake Mead and Lake Powell storage. Updated through Water Year 2025. Note the tiny points on the annual data so that you can flyspeck the individual years. Credit: Brad Udall

Click the link to read the article on the AZCentral website (Brandon Loomis). Here’s an excerpt:

May 14, 2026

Key Points

  • The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation is now seeking a 10-year water-sharing plan for the Colorado River states, adjusting cutbacks every two years.
  • A worst-case scenario being modeled could slash water shares for Arizona, California and Nevada by 40%.
  • The Lower Basin states have proposed their own conservation plan, which could cover the first two years of the new federal framework.

Unable to get Colorado River states to hash out a new 20-year deal to share in worsening water shortages, the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation has told them itโ€™s now aiming for a 10-year plan with prescribed cutbacks to be reassessed every two years. Federal officials informed the seven states of their new preference late last week, and Arizonaโ€™s lead negotiator made it public on Wednesday, May 13, during a meeting of a committee representing the cities, tribes and other water users who meet to develop a unified state position.

The shift to what could effectively become five two-year plans carries both opportunities and risks for Arizona. On the one hand, state Water Resources Director Tom Buschatzke said, it means a proposal that the Lower Basin states โ€” Arizona, California and Nevada โ€”ย recently submitted to boost their conservation through 2028 could cover the first two-year term if federal officials agree. That would keep water moving through the Central Arizona Project Canal, an economic lifeline that is at risk under some other scenarios. On the other hand, a move to bite-size plans โ€œhas us in a room negotiating for the next 10 years,โ€ Buschatzke said at a meeting of the Arizona Reconsultation Committee. โ€œThatโ€™s not something that creates the certainty that weโ€™ve heard some people desire.โ€

[…]

New rules are necessary because the shortage-sharing guidelines that covered the last 20 years expire this fall โ€” and because the river keeps shrinking along with aย paltry snowpack in the Rocky Mountains. A deepening shortage has increased the stakes, keeping a consensus deal out of reach…In pitching their new 10-year “framework,” federal officials also informed the states that they intend to at least model the potential effects of a 3 million acre-foot annual reduction to what the three Lower Basin states could pull from Lake Mead. That worst-case scenario would slash 40% from what the century-old Colorado River Compact promised those Lower Basin states, and it could dry up the CAP Canal. Itโ€™s nearly twice the reduction that those states offered in their recent proposal…A 10-year program with a broad menu of potential guidelines that update every two years allows flexibility to adapt to both the changing hydrology and the potential for a political breakthrough on a consensus deal, [Alex] Smith said.

Map of the Colorado River drainage basin, created using USGS data. By Shannon1 Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0