The health of our waters is the principal measure of how we live on the land — Luna Leopold
Bureau of Reclamation declares first-ever shortage on the #ColoradoRiver basin, triggering water reductions — The #ColoradoSprings Gazette #COriver #aridification
FromColorado Politics (Marianne Goodland) via The Colorado Springs Gazette:
On Monday the bureau announced the first-ever shortage on the Colorado River basin, meaning limitations on water supplies for three states (Arizona, Nevada and California) and Mexico, beginning in January 2022 and continuing for the entire year.
The levels at Lake Mead have been flirting with that 1,075-foot level going back to 2014.
According to the Bureau of Reclamation, both Lake Mead and Lake Powell, the two largest reservoirs on the Colorado River, have been over-appropriated for years. Up until now, the imbalance has been managed and demands met as a result of “the considerable amount of reservoir storage capacity in the Colorado River system.” That includes the dozens of reservoirs in Colorado that feed into the Colorado River.
Water from the Colorado, which begins in Rocky Mountain National Park, is divided up among seven states and Mexico and governed by a 1922 compact that divides the states into upper basin and lower basin regions. The upper basin states are Colorado, Utah, New Mexico and Wyoming, and water is “banked” for those states in Lake Powell.
Delph Carpenter’s original map showing a reservoir at Glen Canyon via Greg Hobbs
The lower basin states — Arizona, Nevada and California — rely on the river‘s waters when it reaches Lake Mead, and the hydropower generated by Hoover Dam…
The lower basin states will feel the first impacts of the bureau’s Monday announcement. Arizona is expected to lose 18% of its share from the Colorado, or 512,000 acre-feet of water. According to the Associated Press, that’s about 8% of the state’s total water use…
Nevada will lose about 7% of its allocation, or 21,000 acre-feet of water. But it will not feel the shortage because of conservation efforts and alternative sources of water, the AP reported Monday.
California holds more senior water rights than either of the two states, so its allocation will be spared, at least for now. Mexico will lose 80,000 acre-feet, about 5% of its allocation from the Colorado.
In a statement Monday, bureau officials said the Upper Basin experienced an exceptionally dry spring in 2021, with April to July runoff into Lake Powell totaling just 26% of average, and that’s even despite near-average snowfall last winter. Total Colorado River system storage today is 40% of capacity, down from 49% at this time last year, the bureau stated…
…22 years of drought along the Colorado have meant other reservoirs — not just Lake Mead and Lake Powell — are also being tapped. Last month, the bureau announced it would draw down water from two reservoirs in Colorado and one in Utah, in order to keep Lake Powell, which includes the Glen Canyon Dam, and its hydropower headed to Nevada, going.
The bureau intends to siphon 36,000 acre-feet from Blue Mesa Reservoir in Gunnison County beginning in August. It will draw 20,000 acre-feet from Navajo Reservoir, on the Colorado-New Mexico border in southwestern Colorado. Flaming Gorge Reservoir, in Utah, will send 125,000 acre-feet later this year.
All that water will raise Lake Powell’s levels by 3 feet.
According to the Bureau of Reclamation, on Monday, Lake Mead’s elevation was 1,067.8 feet (35% of capacity). Lake Mead dropped below 1,071.6 feet on June 8, the lowest elevation on record since the lake first filled in the late 1930s…
But the entire Colorado River basin system is struggling, according to a May Bureau of Reclamation draft report on reservoir operations.
At the beginning of water year 2021 (Oct. 1, 2020), the Colorado River’s total system storage was 48% of capacity, the bureau draft report said. As of Sept. 30, total system storage is expected to be at 41% of capacity.
Taylor Hawes, Colorado River program director for The Nature Conservancy, said in a statement Monday the Tier 1 shortage declaration did not come as a surprise.
“The Colorado River has witnessed a steady decline in flows since 2000 that impacts communities, agriculture, industry and the health of our rivers in the region. Even as flows decreased, our demand reductions have not kept pace,” Hawes said.
“The Colorado River can be a model for resiliency and sustainability, but not without a concerted and significant effort by stakeholders in the region.”
Becky Mitchell is director of the Colorado Water Conservation Board and Colorado’s commission for the Upper Basin states. She told Colorado Politics in a statement that “Colorado and the other Upper Basin states understand the risks and vulnerabilities we face in the Colorado River system due to severe drought and a potentially hotter and drier future.”
[…]
Also on Monday, governors of 10 Western states, including Colorado, sent a request to the Biden administration to issue a drought disaster declaration for the 10 states, which would allow the states to tap into resources from the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
2 thoughts on “Bureau of Reclamation declares first-ever shortage on the #ColoradoRiver basin, triggering water reductions — The #ColoradoSprings Gazette #COriver #aridification”
I watch the water levels every year were I live on the roaring fork river. It has been consistently flowing lower over the last 10 years. I travel through out the western states regularly in my RV and boat. In my opinion the people who are in charge if the water reclamation should all be fired. As they admitt they new this was coming.They should of started conservative measures years ago and they didn’t. I have researched as well have worked with water in someway or a other most of my life.and can’t believe that they have not made mandatoey changes in the waterreleases. Example if they did the math they could if lowered flow of all damns.during the time when electricity is in less demand. Example. Just running the turbines at 80% capacity would have saved about 20% of water. Most people would not even notice.
However if for some reason the people did experience problems like short term bkackouts then they might conserve more. With the population growing in the West why do the average person have to suffer for the wealthy golf courses to keep that plus green grass. In the middle if a dessert were it wasn’t ment to be. The far.ers that feed ourcountryare shot changed and the golf courses are allowed to have plush green grass. Maybe I’m crazy but it just don’t make sense. I could go on but what’s the use. I do have better alternatives that I have come up With but no one seems to give a call. So I guess in the next decade or so we will all fry.im glad I’m a senior and won’t live to see it. But what about our children grandchildren. Get people to listen to ideas from the average person like me or someone that has been actually gives a damb. Obviously the people war paying now to over see this have done nothing until now. NOW MIGHTBE TO KATE. JOE
Joe,
Thanks for commenting. Colorado River administration is governed by the “Law of the River” (The Compact and subsequent legislation, compacts, water law, and a multitude of diverters.) and power is governed by contracts. Both were conceived in a time when stationarity (the past predicts the future) was more reliable. The current 20-year drought in the Colorado River Basin was a surprise to many but not all. Remember, we just came out of a horror of a time with Federal water policy where the basin was not targeted for funding for planning. Also, the relationship between soil moisture and runoff is a feedback that was hard to measure.
I watch the water levels every year were I live on the roaring fork river. It has been consistently flowing lower over the last 10 years. I travel through out the western states regularly in my RV and boat. In my opinion the people who are in charge if the water reclamation should all be fired. As they admitt they new this was coming.They should of started conservative measures years ago and they didn’t. I have researched as well have worked with water in someway or a other most of my life.and can’t believe that they have not made mandatoey changes in the waterreleases. Example if they did the math they could if lowered flow of all damns.during the time when electricity is in less demand. Example. Just running the turbines at 80% capacity would have saved about 20% of water. Most people would not even notice.
However if for some reason the people did experience problems like short term bkackouts then they might conserve more. With the population growing in the West why do the average person have to suffer for the wealthy golf courses to keep that plus green grass. In the middle if a dessert were it wasn’t ment to be. The far.ers that feed ourcountryare shot changed and the golf courses are allowed to have plush green grass. Maybe I’m crazy but it just don’t make sense. I could go on but what’s the use. I do have better alternatives that I have come up With but no one seems to give a call. So I guess in the next decade or so we will all fry.im glad I’m a senior and won’t live to see it. But what about our children grandchildren. Get people to listen to ideas from the average person like me or someone that has been actually gives a damb. Obviously the people war paying now to over see this have done nothing until now. NOW MIGHTBE TO KATE. JOE
Joe,
Thanks for commenting. Colorado River administration is governed by the “Law of the River” (The Compact and subsequent legislation, compacts, water law, and a multitude of diverters.) and power is governed by contracts. Both were conceived in a time when stationarity (the past predicts the future) was more reliable. The current 20-year drought in the Colorado River Basin was a surprise to many but not all. Remember, we just came out of a horror of a time with Federal water policy where the basin was not targeted for funding for planning. Also, the relationship between soil moisture and runoff is a feedback that was hard to measure.
John Orr
http://coyotegulch.blog/