Lose the turf, gain a garden: As #water resources dwindle in the U.S. west due to #drought and #ClimateChange, #Colorado residents are tossing the turf and opting instead for rain gardens. — 9News.com #conservation

Photo from the Colorado Independent.

Click the link to read the article on the 9News.com webite (Keely Chalmers). Here’s an excerpt:

More and more homeowners are doing away with a traditional turf lawn in order to conserve a lot of water.

“The average American uses 160 to 180 gallons of water per day and then here in Colorado, about half of that is used on our outdoor irrigation,” according to Jessica Thrasher withย Colorado State University.

Over the last year, she and a team of volunteers installed rain gardens across the Front Range as part of a pilot program. It’s a simple and attractive way to save not just a little but a lot of water.ย  More than 300 people applied for the program…The Colorado Water Centerย even has tutorial on its websiteย showing, step-by-step how to build your own rain garden. In addition, Colorado’s Turf Replacement program went into effect last summer. It offers funding to communities so they can replace turf in order to reduce outdoor water usage.

After a four-year campaign, New York says yes to publicly owned renewables: The state has set ambitious climate targets. Now it’ll build the clean energy it needs to meet them — Grist #ActOnClimate #KeepItInTheGround

Wind turbines and electrical substation of Alpha Ventus Offshore Wind Farm in the North Sea. By SteKrueBe – Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=17009450

Click the link to read the article on the Grist website (Akielly Hu):

On Tuesday [May 2, 2023], New York lawmakers passed a law that, for the first time, authorizes the New York Power Authority โ€” the largest state public power authority in the U.S. โ€” to build renewable energy projects to help reach the stateโ€™s climate goals.ย 

The new Build Public Renewables Act, passed as part of New Yorkโ€™s annual budget, is a culmination of four years of organizing by climate and community organizations, and has been heralded as a major win by energy democracy, environmental justice, and labor groups. 

โ€œThis will enable us to build renewable energy projects with gold-standard labor language, ensuring that the transition to renewable energy benefits working people and their families,โ€ Patrick Robbins, an organizer with the grassroots Public Power NY Coalition, told Grist. 

The new law directs the New York Power Authority to plan, construct, and operate renewable energy projects in service of the stateโ€™s renewable energy goals. Under New Yorkโ€™s 2019 Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act, the state aims to generateย 70 percentย of its electricity from renewables and cut overall greenhouse gas emissions byย 40 percentย by 2030.

The Build Public Renewables Act includes several provisions to prioritize clean energy access for low- and middle-income customers, organized labor, and a just transition for workers displaced from fossil fuel projects. It requires the New York Power Authority to establish a program allowing low- and moderate-income electricity customers in disadvantaged communities to receive credits on their monthly utility bills for any renewable energy produced by the power authority. 

The new law also stipulates that workers or contractors hired for these new renewable energy projects must be protected by a collective bargaining agreement. And it instructs the public power authority to enter into a memorandum of understanding with labor unions to uphold and protect pay rates, training, and safety standards for workers supporting the operation and maintenance of such projects. Candidates who have lost employment in the oil and gas sector will be prioritized for those positions. Beginning in 2024, the authority will also be authorized to allocate up to $25 million each year toward worker-training programs for the renewable energy sector.

Activists applaud a provision to phase out so-called peaker power plants owned by the New York Power Authority by 2030 and replace them with renewable energy systems. These small natural gas power plants quickly start and stop during times of peak energy demand, typically in the summer, when air-conditioning use ramps up. They are also a major source of pollution and sickness for nearby communities. 

In a 2021 report, a coalition of state environmental justice groups found thatย 78 percentย of residents living within one mile of the plants are either low income or people of color. The report also found that peaker plants contribute up to 94 percent of New Yorkโ€™s nitrogen oxide pollution, a key component of smog, on high-ozone days.

The law had been introduced โ€” and failed to pass โ€” the last two consecutive years before finally passing this year. New York state Assembly Member Sarahana Shrestha, elected this past November, was a key force in pushing the legislation through the state assembly. Before serving in the assembly, she was an organizer with the Public Power NY Coalition and the New York chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America, helping to rally around the Build Public Renewables Act. She ran on a climate campaign aligned with the public power movement, which aims to shift energy utilities from the traditional investor-owned, private model to public ownership and democratic governance. 

To Shrestha, the new law addresses โ€œfundamental questions like who should own energy, who should serve energy, at what cost, and what kind of energy should we be making, and who should be deciding those things.โ€

The bill prevailed despite opposition from groups including the Independent Power Producers of New York, a trade association of energy companies working in renewables and fossil fuels, and the Alliance for Clean Energy New York, a coalition of renewable energy businesses. 

In a joint letter to New York Governor Kathy Hochul, the two organizations and four other groups stated that having the public power authority build renewables โ€œdoes not create a level playing field with the private sector.โ€ They also raised concerns that the law does not address ongoing barriers to clean energy development in New York, such as delays in connecting to transmission systems and permitting. 

Proponents of the law argue that industry resistance was outweighed by broad support from community-based organizations, environmental justice groups, and unions representing more than 1 million workers in New York.

Another factor in the lawโ€™s successful passage was last yearโ€™s Inflation Reduction Act, President Joe Bidenโ€™s landmark climate spending legislation. The federal law provides newly expanded tax credits for renewables and makes them available to tax-exempt public power entities like the New York Power Authority. 

Shrestha and other advocates hope that the new Build Public Renewables Act will inspire similar legislation in other states โ€” and theyโ€™re already seeing local Democratic Socialists of America chapters and other advocacy groups reach out. 

โ€œThe reason I am excited about this win is not because our work is done, but now it means we can start our work,โ€ Shrestha said. 

About 12,000 cfs at the start of the #ColoradoRiver Park in #GrandJunction – high & fast! — Hannah Holm #COriver #runoff

Colorado River ~12,000 cfs April 7, 2023. Photo credit: Hannah Holm

From Hannah Holm via Twitter.

Dust on snow seems to be increasing the chances of #RioGrande drying this year through #Albuquerque — John Fleck (InkStain) #aridification

Rio Grande overbanking May 3, 2023 finally topped my little bike trail north of Albuquerqueโ€™s Central Avenue Bridge. ~4k cubic feet per second. Photo credit: John Fleck/InkStain

Click the link to read the article on the InkStain website (John Fleck):

We have a chance this year to watch a fascinating intersection of climate-change driven changes in the Rio Grande through Albuquerque as filtered through both physical infrastructure and what we call the โ€œinstitutional hydrographโ€.

THE TL;DR

Dust on snow is likely to accelerate Rio Grande headwaters snowmelt, meaning all that stored water comes off earlier. With nowhere to store it (see below, itโ€™s an issue of both rules and physical infrastructure problems), weโ€™ll be operating this year in a run-of-the-river situation on the middle Rio Grande through Albuquerque. Even though thereโ€™s still a lot of snow right now, once it comes off weโ€™ll be down to base flow on the Rio Grande. Absent good summer rains, the river could dry through Albuquerque again this year.

DUST ON SNOW

The driver is a phenomenon researchers have identified in the past two decades called โ€œdust on snowโ€œ. Itโ€™s when dry spring winds sweep across the arid uplands of, in our case, the Colorado Plateau, kicking up a layer or layers of dust that is then deposited atop the mountain snows in the high country. You can get multiple dust  layers, and when the melt reaches them, the snow warms up and melts quicker. Thereโ€™s a climate change connection to all of this, as hotter, drier springs seem to lead to more dust (which makes intuitive sense, and is discussed in Painter, Thomas H. et al. โ€œResponse of Colorado River runoff to dust radiative forcing in snow.โ€ Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 107 (2010): 17125 โ€“ 17130.

Weโ€™ve got that going on this year in the Rio Grande headwaters. From this morningโ€™sย Downtown Albuquerque News:

THE PHYSICAL PLUMBING: EL VADO DAM

In the โ€œbefore timesโ€ (before the creation of the Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District in the early 20th century, which led to the construction of El Vado Dam) communities in New Mexicoโ€™s Middle Rio Grande depended on the run of the river. When the runoff dwindled in the summer, they couldnโ€™t irrigate. (This is part of the reasoning behind our argument in the new book that claims that there once were ~125,000 acres irrigated in the Middle Valley are not credible.) Construction of El Vado allowed communities to do the classic โ€œdams move water in timeโ€ thing โ€“ store some of the big spring peak and stretch it out through summer.

El Vado Dam and Reservoir. Photo credit: USBR

El Vado is busted, though, unusable while it undergoes repairs. As Dani Prokop reported last month, the repairs are dragging:

That means no storage (other than a little bit in Abiquiu Reservoir for Native American communities) for irrigators, which means that once the snow is melted, the river will dwindle.

THE INSTITUTIONAL PLUMBING: ARTICLE VI

Even if El Vadoย wasnโ€™tย broken, though, weโ€™d sorta be in the same bind thanks to Article VI of theย Rio Grande compact, which saysโ€ฆ.

New Mexicoโ€™s compact debt to Texas โ€“ the net weโ€™ve underdelivered in recent years โ€“ is 93,000 acre feet. So even if El Vado wasnโ€™t broken, any water we were able to store up to 93,000 acre feet would have to stay there. (This is why the Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District has reduced its diversions this year to 80 percent of what the district otherwise be sending down its canals โ€“ to get more of that water to Elephant Butte Reservoir, to try to reduce compact debt, so they can usefully store water once El Vado is fixed. This is a whole other blog post, because the discourse around this has been fascinating as I do the โ€œembedded writerโ€ thing at MRGCD for my book research.)

HYDROLOGY IN THE 21ST CENTURY: UNDERSTANDING THE RULES

I was down at the Rio Grande yesterday morning to record an interview about western water stuff with a crew from Italian public television. (The were neat! It was fun!) A bosque walker asked what we were doing and Luca, the TV guy, explained that they were interviewing the professor (pointing to me). The woman asked if I was a hydrologist. No, I replied, I do water policy.

Thatโ€™s the thing. To understand the flow in the river we were standing next to, you need to understand the physical science โ€“ climate, hydrology, and such. But then, crucially, you needs to think about how the actual wet water is filter through the systemโ€™s human-built physical plumbing, which then requires understanding who it all is filtered through the rules.

A NOTE ON SOURCES, METHODS, AND BUSINESS MODELS

At this point in a post like this, I often drop in a thanks to my supporters, who make this work possible, including the Utton Center and Inkstainโ€™s contributors. But Iโ€™d also point you to the linked information sources above โ€“ Downtown Albuquerque News is subscription-supported and one of my favorite local news reads, and Source NM (Dani Prokopโ€™s employer โ€“ sheโ€™s doing great water stuff, invaluable to the community). Information is a public good, and as my economist friends like to point out, because of the free rider problem, public goods are under-provided.

Mountain lion kill sites give vegetation a boost, new study shows: Researchers examined soil samples and plant growth at hundreds of carcass sites to find connections with landscape health — @WyoFile

A mountain lion feasting on a bull elk on the National Elk Refuge. Photo credit: Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation

Click the link to read the article on the WyoFile website (Christine Peterson):

One day about a decade ago, professional tracker and cougar researcher Michelle Peziol took a group of graduate students from Teton Science School on a walk through an aspen grove near Jackson. GPS in hand, Peziol led the class to an area where a collared mountain lion had been spending time. 

As the bright sun illuminated the early summer grass at the site, Peziol noticed an almost perfect circle of darker-green grass. She looked around. Nothing obvious would have caused the grass in that precise location to be richer and more robust. Then she remembered: A lion had killed a deer in that spot the prior year. Could the remains of that deer kill have fertilized the soil? 

Ten years later, Peziol and four other researchers published the answer: Yes, it could. 

A new paper in the journalย Springer Natureย outlines how mountain lions in the Tetons create areas with more protein-rich grasses that nourish big game when the leftovers of carcasses they kill and consume decompose. Lion researcher Mark Elbroch calls it a version of โ€œgardening to hunt,โ€ but to Wyoming Game and Fish large carnivore section supervisor, Dan Thompson, the results further illustrate just how connected every species โ€” from lions to deer to beetles to grass โ€” are to one another.ย 

โ€œAs far as mountain lion management, [this research] reinforces their role in the ecosystem,โ€ Thompson said. โ€œItโ€™s important because weโ€™re one of the few places in North America where itโ€™s still occurring like it used to.โ€ 

As hunters and outfitters fret about predators killing big game like mule deer after a particularly harsh winter, researchers say projects like this highlight how much more there is to learn from the role each species โ€” predators included โ€” play on the landscape. 

Killing, eating and stealing

Each of Wyomingโ€™s large carnivores come with a buffet of preconceived notions about how it kills, what it eats and its role on the mountains and plains of Wyoming. Some generalities prove true: Wolves tend to kill in packs while mountain lions and grizzly bears, for example, are solo hunters. But while many assume the large predators kill and eat only live, big game, science is increasingly proving otherwise. 

Groups like the Interagency Grizzly Bear Study Team show grizzly bears eat more than 260 species within four animal kingdoms, including ants, moths, elk, bison, 175 types of plants and one species of algae. Wolves, meanwhile, eat primarily elk, deer, a whole host of small animals like rabbits and beaver and sometimes even berries. Mountain lions, often viewed as the most likely to stalk and kill a deer or elk wandering through the woods, will just as readily stalk a raccoon, a goose or a skunk. And depending on the area, up to 20% of a mountain lionโ€™s diet consists of already-dead critters they happened upon, Thompson said.  

Of the meals that lions kill, they share (often not willingly) with hundreds of other species on the landscape.ย 

โ€œEverything from weird things like flying squirrels and mice to the usual suspects, like bears and eagles and turkey vultures,โ€ said Elbroch, one of the paperโ€™s co-authors and the Puma Program director for Panthera, a global wild cat conservation organization. โ€œWhat that really speaks to is how energy moves in the system and how it strengthens an ecosystem by creating all these new links and food webs.โ€

This doesnโ€™t mean cougars kill game and simply move along, Thompson said. Lions will eat as much as they can. 

โ€œThereโ€™s no evolutionary benefit of killing for fun,โ€ Thompson said. โ€œThereโ€™s no benefit in wasting food.โ€

But the research shows that even goopy bits of carcasses that seep into the earth before they are consumed can produce surprising results years later. After years of mapping GPS location data and collecting soil samples, Peziolโ€™s team began to piece together a picture of how those carcasses influence the quality of the soil itself.ย 

Connections from the ground up

Finding answers to big ecological questions requires more than a field season or two, Peziol said. It takes years of collecting information from the same locations and, in the case of this study, returning to the University of Washington with a U-Haul full of dirt. 

Once Peziol and Elbroch decided to investigate the connections between lions and vegetation, Peziol began the long process of collecting thousands of samples from the Wyoming mountains. 

The work began with lion collars, which sent location points to a satellite every one to two hours. If a lion stayed in a location for more than four hours, it could mean it was eating or napping. So Peziol started trekking to those locations to find out. If it had killed and cached an animal, Peziol took soil samples from directly underneath the carcass as well as 10 feet away in areas with the same conditions like sunlight and slope. 

She repeated the process every three months for a year, then twice a year for three years. When vegetation began to grow at the carcass site, she plucked samples of those plants and samples from the same nearby species, again growing in similar conditions. 

A U-Haul of dirt, thousands of individual samples and 13 undergraduate students analyzing soil and plant quality later, she could prove that plants growing where carcasses decomposed had higher quantities of protein.ย 

While the same benefits may arrive from species hunted by humans โ€” if the carcasses remain in the woods and arenโ€™t schlepped to a landfill โ€” the lion affected areas tended to be located in certain zones where mountain lions preferred to hunt. 

That means pockets of better-quality vegetation proliferate in select areas on the landscape, Elbroch said, potentially drawing even more big game to those areas. 

โ€œTo use trendy science language, we were able to definitively show that mountain lions were ecosystem engineers, and that they were creating habitat for other species,โ€ Elbroch said.

However, knowing if, in fact, deer and elk return to those areas because of the better vegetation would entail more research not of lions, but of deer and elk themselves. 

The study results remind Thompson of migrating salmon and how their decomposing bodies change water pH and add to soil nutrients, which then boosts vegetation growth that attracts more grazing animals that then bring more predators.ย 

โ€œItโ€™s more than lions killing deer,โ€ Thompson said. โ€œItโ€™s very easy to try to simplify the reality of whatโ€™s happening on the landscape, and by doing so we donโ€™t give credit to these very intricately woven natural occurrences happening around us.โ€Tagged:WyoFile App

Christine Peterson has covered science, the environment and outdoor recreation in Wyoming for more than a decade for various publications including the Casper Star-Tribune, National Geographic and Outdoor…ย More by Christine Peterson

A World Without Bees? Hereโ€™s What Happens If Bees Go Extinct: Assessing our chances of survival without the prodigious pollinator — NRDC #ActOnClimate

Bad for bees, bad for people? @bberwyn photo.

Click the link to read the article on the NRDC website (Brian Palmer):

There was more bad news on the honeybee front last week. A U.S. Department of Agriculture report found that honeybee losses in managed coloniesโ€”the kind that beekeepers rent out to farmersโ€”hit 42 percent this year.

That number grabbed most of the headlines, but there was more troublesome data below the fold. The magic number in beekeeping is 18.7 percent. Population losses below that level are sustainable; lose any more, though, and the colony is heading toward zero. A startling two-thirds of beekeepers in the USDA survey reported losses above the threshold, suggesting that the pollination industry is in trouble.

For the first time, the USDA reported more losses in summer than winter. Experts canโ€™t explain the reversalโ€”especially since the colony collapse disorder epidemic that peaked several years ago seems to have abated. The summer losses may have a single, unknown cause, or a group of known and intensifying causes, such as pesticides or mites.

Today the White House followed the USDA’s report with its long-awaited plan to help maintain and grow the pollinator population, including building pollinator gardens near federal buildings and restoring government-owned lands in ways that support bees. Itโ€™s a good first step.

Albert Einstein is sometimes quoted as saying, โ€œIf the bee disappears from the surface of the earth, man would have no more than four years to live.โ€ Itโ€™s highly unlikely that Einstein said that. For one thing, thereโ€™sย no evidenceย of him saying it. For another, the statement is hyperbolic and wrong (and Einstein wasย rarely wrong). But there is a kernel of truth in the famous misquote.

Bees and Agriculture

Bees and humans have been through a lot together. People began keeping bees as early as 20,000 BCE, according to the late and eminent melittologist Eva Crane. (Yes, someone who studies bees is a melittologist.) To put that length of time into perspective, the average global temperature 22,000 years ago was more than 35 degrees Fahrenheit cooler than today, and ice sheets covered large parts of North America. Beekeeping probably predates the dawn of agriculture, which occurred about 12,000 years ago, and likely made farming possible.

How important are bees to farming today? If you ask 10 reporters that question, youโ€™ll get 11 answers. Some stories say that bees pollinate more than two-thirds of our most important crops, while others say itโ€™s closer to one-third. A spread of that size indicates a lack of authoritative scholarship on the subject. My review of the literature suggests the same.

The most thorough and informative study came back in 2007, when an international team of agricultural scholarsย reviewedย the importance of animal pollinators, including bees, to farming. Their results could encourage both the alarmists and the minimizers in the world of bee observation. The group found that 87 crops worldwide employ animal pollinators, compared to only 28 that can survive without such assistance. Since honeybees are by consensus the most important animal pollinators, those are scary numbers.

Look at the data differently, though, and it’s clear why the misattributed Einstein quote is a bit of an exaggeration. Approximately 60 percent of the total volume of food grown worldwide does not require animal pollination. Many staple foods, such as wheat, rice, and corn, are among those 28 crops that require no help from bees. They either self-pollinate or get help from the wind. Those foods make up a tremendous proportion of human calorie intake worldwide.

Even among the 87 crops that use animal pollinators, there are varying degrees of how much the plants need them. Only 13 absolutely require animal pollination, while 30 more are โ€œhighly dependentโ€ on it. Production of the remaining crops would likely continue without bees with only slightly lower yields.

OK, So Can We Live Without Bees?

The truth is, if honeybees did disappear for good, humans would probably not go extinct (at least not solely for that reason). But our diets would still suffer tremendously. Theย variety of foodsย available would diminish, and the cost of certain products would surge. The California Almond Board, for example, has been campaigning to save bees for years.ย Without bees and their ilk, the group says, almonds โ€œsimply wouldnโ€™t exist.โ€ Weโ€™d still have coffee without bees, but it would become expensive and rare. The coffee flower is only open for pollination for three or four days. If no insect happens by in that short window, the plant wonโ€™t be pollinated.

There are plenty of other examples: apples, avocados, onions, and several types of berries rely heavily on bees for pollination. The disappearance of honeybees, or even a substantial drop in their population, would make those foods scarce. Humanity would surviveโ€”but our dinners would get a lot less interesting.

Billionaire #Colorado landowner no longer pursuing Tennessee Pass rail line: Future of #Pueblo-to-Eagle County route tied to controversial proposed #Utah oil train project — Colorado Newsline #ActOnClimate #KeepItInTheGround

La Veta Pass โ€” the highest still-operating freight railroad pass on the continent at 9,242 feet — on U.S. Route 160 in southern Colorado. The pass lies on the border between Huerfano County to the east and Costilla County to the west. The elevation is 9,413 feet. The two signs in the picture are parallel to the highway on the south side. By Jeffrey Beall – Own work, CC BY 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=37517201

Click the link to read the article on the Colorado Newsline website (David O. Williams):

MINTURN, Colo. โ€” A billionaire New York developer and Colorado agricultural landowner who launched a full-blown railroad war in his pursuit of Union Pacificโ€™s dormant Tennessee Pass rail line from Pueblo to Eagle County is no longer trying to acquire any part of the approximately 200-mile stretch of tracks.

โ€œMr. Soloviev has no further interest in purchasing the Tennessee Pass Line; he has instead purchased the San Luis Valley Line,โ€ Colorado Pacific Railroadโ€™s general counsel William Osborn said of Stefan Soloviev, chairman of the Soloviev Group and Crossroads Agriculture โ€” the 26th largest landowner in the U.S. with farming, ranching, and renewable energy in Colorado, New Mexico and Kansas. Crossroads has an estimated 400,000 acres of farmland in production.

Asked if this means Soloviev is no longer pursuing an east-to-west rail connection to move his grain to West Coast ports for transport to Asia, thereby breaking upย Union Pacificโ€™s โ€œmonopoly strangleholdโ€ย on freight transport through Colorado, Osborn said, โ€œI canโ€™t comment on that.โ€

Solovievโ€™s Colorado Pacific Railroad, which also owns the Towner Line in southeastern Colorado, previously confirmed that its newly acquired San Luis Rio Grande railroad does not have a westward connection to the nationโ€™s main rail grid.

Soloviev previously offered Union Pacific up to $10 million for the Tennessee Pass Line, which has been dormant but not abandoned since the Union Pacific, Southern Pacific merger in 1997, and said that to get local support he would pay for once-a-day passenger service from Pueblo to Minturn and recreational trails on the rail right-of-way along the Arkansas River.

But he made it clear his primary purpose in pursuing the Tennessee Pass Line, which connects to Union Pacificโ€™s active central corridor line at Dotsero before heading west through Glenwood Canyon, was to move freight, estimating it would cost him $278 million to refurbish just 160 miles of the Tennessee Pass Line.

Photo shows Tennessee Creek near the confluence of the East Fork Arkansas River in winter with snow on the Continental Divide of the Americas. The report evaluates current and emerging snow measurement technologies for the Western United States. Photo: Reclamation

First trains in a quarter century possible

Colorado Pacific may simply be waiting on the results of legal wrangling between Eagle County and several environmental groups suing to overturn federal approval of the Uinta Basin Railway โ€” an 88-mile short line that would connect the oil fields of northeastern Utah to the main rail network and send up to 10, two-mile-long trains a day along the Colorado River into Denver.

Besides arguing that such an increase in oil production would beย โ€œfanning the flamesโ€ of climate change, Eagle County attorneys say the Uinta Basin Railway would ratchet up pressure on federal rail regulators and railroad companies to reopen the Tennessee Pass Line โ€” a far more direct route to Gulf Coast refineries and one that avoids the Denver metro area altogether.

โ€œIt doesnโ€™t necessarily change our position,โ€ Eagle County Attorney Bryan Treu said of the news Soloviev is no longer pursuing the Tennessee Pass Line. โ€œApproval of the Uinta Basin proposal makes the TPL line reopening much more viable, whether it is Soloviev or someone else. With or without the TPL line, 350,000 barrels of waxy crude oil running daily within feet of the Colorado River remains a concern for Eagle County.โ€

Eagle County Commissioner Matt Scherr said he was not surprised Colorado Pacific is no longer trying to acquire the Tennessee Pass Line: โ€œIf Soloviev just wants to use the rail, he doesnโ€™t care who operates it.โ€

Nor does Scherr think Solovievโ€™s announced lack of interest decreases the chances of trains for the first time in a quarter century rumbling along the line through Eagle County towns like Minturn, where he was once mayor, and then west through Avon, Edwards, Eagle and Gypsum. 

โ€œNo, just because of common carrier rules, I think that that should always be a concern,โ€ Scherr said of federal law that requires railroad operators to carry any and all kinds freight, including some forms of hazardous materials, at reasonable rates.

On Wednesday, the U.S. Court of Appeals, D.C. Circuit, in Washington, D.C., heard oral arguments on a petition for review of the U.S. Surface Transportation Boardโ€™s approval of the Uinta Basin Railway. Essentially, Eagle County and the Center for Biological Diversity argue the STB didnโ€™t adequately consider the potential climate, wildfire and oil-spill impacts.

โ€œThe oral arguments went well โ€ฆ and long. Itโ€™s hard to read the tea leaves from the judges based on their questions, but they clearly knew the issues and had hard questions for all sides,โ€ said Eagle Countyโ€™s Treu. Oil trains would increase on active tracks along the Colorado River in the northwest corner of the county, while the dormant Tennessee Pass Line runs right along the Eagle River.

A schematic of rail lines in Colorado, including the Tennessee Pass Line between Pueblo and Dotsero in Eagle County. (Colorado Pacific Railroad)

Elected leaders decry oil train project

Union Pacific has an agreement with Texas-based Rio Grande Pacific to pursue a revival of passenger service and โ€œlimited freightโ€ along the Tennessee Pass Line from Parkdale, a point just west of the active Royal Gorge Route Railroad, to Sage, a point just east of the mainline connection at Dotsero. Such a route would not connect to the nationโ€™s active rail network.

Rio Grande Pacific, which in Colorado wants to operate on the Tennessee Pass Line as Colorado Midland & Pacific, also is the operator of the proposed Uinta Basin Railway in Utah. A Colorado spokeswoman for Rio Grande Pacific did not return an email requesting comment.

โ€œThe Midland group is saying they would just want to do passenger, but the numbers donโ€™t work to restore the track. Weโ€™re pretty skeptical about that,โ€ Minturn Mayor Earle Bidez said. โ€œI mean, if they want to do tourist trains, passenger to Leadville and back, itโ€™ll be over and $40 or $50 million to restore track, but I canโ€™t help but think that once they get in, then theyโ€™re going say, โ€˜OK, yeah, weโ€™ve got some agricultural products we want to get through this way,โ€™ and then theyโ€™re going to say, โ€˜OK, we want to get this waxy (crude) stuff coming up this way.โ€™โ€

Rio Grande Pacific has consistently said it is not interested in the Tennessee Pass Line for moving oil, even trying to get the U.S. Surface Transportation Board to approve its expedited lease on the line with language excluding the transport of oil โ€” something the STB did not allow. The STB has approved the transport of oil that would be the primary purpose of the Uinta Basin Railway.

Asked about the Uinta Basin Railway project, including its potential spillover pressure to reopen the Tennessee Pass Line to avoid a surge in oil trains through the state-owned Moffat Tunnel at Winter Park and down into Denver, Conor Cahill, a spokesperson for Gov. Jared Polis, replied:ย โ€œThe governor continues to share a number of the concerns that our Colorado communities and Coloradoโ€™s recreation and tourism industry have raised with the proposal. He continues to monitor this issue and evaluate the stateโ€™s role given largely federal actions to date.โ€

Both Colorado U.S. Sens. Michael Bennet and John Hickenlooper, both Democrats, have urged far more environmental scrutiny of the Uinta Basin Railway and the rejection of the projectโ€™s request for tax-exempt funding through the U.S. Department of Transportation. So has Polisโ€™ successor in the 2nd Congressional District seat that includes most of Eagle County, U.S. Rep. Joe Neguse.

โ€œI think one could certainly make the argument the (Uinta Basin) railway project and the local opposition that has developed and that of course Sen. Bennett and I are articulating at the federal level is perhaps a harbinger of things to come when you think about all of these rail lines across northwest and central Colorado, that, of course, defined our state for a century, in terms of our stateโ€™s formation, but now pose some real risks and challenges in terms of our future,โ€ Neguse said at a water event last month in Minturn, a former railroad town in Eagle County off the backside of Vail Mountain.

Coloradoโ€™s lease with Union Pacific to operate the state-owned Moffat Tunnel expires in 2025. The Colorado Department of Transportation hasย previously expressed interestย in the state purchasing the Tennessee Pass Line if it were to become available.

The Search for Solutions to #Coloradoโ€™s #Water Crisis — 5280.com

River guide John Saunders paddles a boat down the Yampa River in May 2021. Photo via Aspen Journalism

Click the link to read the article on the 5280.com website (Nicholas Hunt). Here’s an excerpt:

Study after study has shown that as the climate warms, more and more Centennial State snowmelt is lost through evaporation and other processes before it can find its way into our rivers, streams, and reservoirs. So weโ€™ll need bigger than average snowpacks each winter just to keep reservoir levels and river flows from falling furtherโ€”and unless everyone gets serious about tackling the climate crisis, thatโ€™s simply not going to happen. Oneย recent studyย from researchers at New Mexicoโ€™s Los Alamos National Laboratory found that Colorado could see a 50 to 60 percent reduction in snow within 60 years. When those same researchers used pattern recognition programs to group subregions of the Colorado River Basin by how each sector will respond to climate change, they found something disturbing: By 2080, much of western Colorado could experience aridity similar to Arizonaโ€™s…

Whatโ€™s even more alarming is that, in many ways, the future is already here. This past June, the Bureau of Reclamation, which manages the Colorado River through a network of reservoirs, announced that the seven states in the Colorado River Basin had 60 days to devise a plan to reduce the amount of river water they use annually by two to four million acre feet, as much as a third of the waterwayโ€™s annual flow…

Meanwhile, water levels are still dropping and the ripple effects of whatever compromise is reachedโ€”or isnโ€™t reachedโ€”will be felt far beyond that river basin, including in Denver, which gets much of its water from the Western Slope. There is some cause for hope, however. From new cash crops that arenโ€™t nearly as thirsty to science-fiction-worthy technology for forecasting droughts, there are ways to decrease demand and stretch supply. โ€œYou need to have as many tools in your toolbox as possible,โ€ says Greg Fisher, demand planning and efficiency manager at Denver Water. โ€œThis is Colorado. Even if you could take the drought and the Colorado River [crisis] out of the equation, weโ€™re still a water-constrained state with a growing population. People need to appreciate what water is for. Itโ€™s for life, safety, and health. I think anything beyond that is discretionary, and I donโ€™t know if weโ€™re at the point where we can afford discretionary use.โ€

Cloud seeding can increase rain and snow, and new techniques may make it a lot more effective โ€“ย podcast

Cloud seeding can increase rainfall and reduce hail damage to crops, but its use is limited. John Finney Photography/Moment via Getty Images

Daniel Merino, The Conversation and Nehal El-Hadi, The Conversation

When an unexpected rainstorm leaves you soaking wet, it is an annoyance. When a drought leads to fires, crop failures and water shortages, the significance of weather becomes vitally important.

If you could control the weather, would you?

Small amounts of rain can mean the difference between struggle and success. For nearly 80 years, an approach called cloud seeding has, in theory, given people the ability to get more rain and snow from storms and make hailstorms less severe. But only recently have scientists been able to peer into clouds and begin to understand how effective cloud seeding really is.

In this episode of โ€œThe Conversation Weekly,โ€ we speak with three researchers about the simple yet murky science of cloud seeding, the economic effects it can have on agriculture, and research that may allow governments to use cloud seeding in more places. Katja Friedrich, a professor of atmospheric and oceanic sciences at the University of Colorado, Boulder in the U.S., is a leading researcher on cloud seeding. โ€œWhen we do cloud seeding, we are looking for clouds that have tiny super-cooled liquid droplets,โ€ she explains. Silver iodide is very similar in structure to an ice crystal. When the droplets touch a particle of silver iodide, โ€œthey freeze, then they can start merging with other ice crystals, become snowflakes and fall out of the cloud.โ€

While the process is fairly straightforward, measuring how effective it is in the real world is not, according to Friedrich. โ€œThe problem is that once we modify a cloud, itโ€™s really difficult to say what wouldโ€™ve happened if you hadnโ€™t cloud-seeded.โ€ Itโ€™s hard enough to predict weather without messing with it artificially.

A plane wing with a cylindrical device attached.
Cloud seeding is usually done by planes equipped with devices โ€“ like the one attached to the wing of this plane โ€“ that spray silver iodide into the atmosphere. Zuckerle/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

In 2017, Friedrichโ€™s research group had a breakthrough in measuring the effect of cloud seeding. โ€œWe flew some aircraft, released silver iodide and generated these clouds that were like these six exact lines that were downstream of where the aircraft were seeding,โ€ she says. They then had a second aircraft fly through the clouds. โ€œWe could actually quantify how much snow we could produce by two hours of cloud seeding.โ€ That effect, according to research on cloud seeding, is an increase in precipitation of somewhere around 5% to 20% or 30%, depending on conditions.

Measuring the effect on precipitation โ€“ whether rain or snow โ€“ directly may have taken complex science and a bit of luck, but in places that have been using cloud seeding for long periods of time, the economic benefits are shockingly clear.

Dean Bangsund is a researcher at North Dakota State University who studies the economics of agriculture. โ€œWe have a high amount of hail damage in North Dakota,โ€ said Bangsund. For decades, the state government has been using cloud seeding to reduce hail damage, as cloud seeding leads to the formation of more pieces of smaller hail compared to fewer pieces of larger hail. โ€œIt doesnโ€™t 100% eliminate hail; itโ€™s designed to soften the impact.โ€

Every 10 years, the state of North Dakota does an analysis on the economic impacts of the cloud seeding program, measuring both reduction in hail damage and benefits from increased rain. Bangsund led the last report and says that for every dollar spent on the cloud seeding program, โ€œwe are looking at something that is anywhere from $8 or $9 in benefit on the really lowest scale, up to probably $20 of impact per acre.โ€ With millions of acres of agricultural fields in the cloud seeding area, that is a massive economic benefit.

Both Freidrich and Bangsund emphasized that cloud seeding, while effective in some cases, cannot be used everywhere. There is also a lot of uncertainty in how much of an effect it has. One way to improve the effectiveness and applicability of cloud seeding is by improving the seed. Linda Zou is a professor of civil infrastructure and environmental engineering at Khalifa University in the United Arab Emirates.

Her work has focused on developing a replacement for silver iodide, and her lab has developed what she calls a nanopowder. โ€œI start with table salt, which is sodium chloride,โ€ says Zou. โ€œThis desirable-sized crystal is then coated with a thin nanomaterial layer of titanium dioxide.โ€ When salt gets wet, it melts and forms a droplet that can efficiently merge with other droplets and fall from a cloud. Titanium dioxide attracts water. Put the two together and you get a very effective cloud-seeding material.

From indoor experiments, Zou found that โ€œwith the nanopowders, there are 2.9 times the formation of larger-size water droplets.โ€ These nanopowders can also form ice crystals at warmer temperatures and less humidity than silver iodide.

As Zou says, โ€œif the material you are releasing is more reactive and can work in a much wider range of conditions, that means no matter when you decide to use it, the chance of success will be greater.โ€


This episode was written and produced by Katie Flood. Mend Mariwany is the executive producer of The Conversation Weekly. Eloise Stevens does our sound design, and our theme music is by Neeta Sarl.

You can find us on Twitter @TC_Audio, on Instagram at theconversationdotcom or via email. You can also subscribe to The Conversationโ€™s free daily email here.

Listen to โ€œThe Conversation Weeklyโ€ via any of the apps listed above, download it directly via our RSS feed or find out how else to listen here.


Daniel Merino, Associate Science Editor & Co-Host of The Conversation Weekly Podcast, The Conversation and Nehal El-Hadi, Science + Technology Editor & Co-Host of The Conversation Weekly Podcast, The Conversation

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

Latest #Colorado river rafting forecast says lots of frothy #water lies ahead — Water Education Colorado @WaterEdCO

Rafters make their way down Clear Creek in Idaho Springs. Colorado’s rivers are expected to be running high after an epic winter. Photo credit: Sara Hertwig via Metropolitan State University of Denver

Click the link to read the article on the Water Education Colorado website (Dean Krakel):

Coloradoโ€™s bountiful snowpack is beginning to melt, and stream and river flows are rising. If current predictions for spring runoff stay on track this could be the longest stretch of boatable days seen on Coloradoโ€™s rivers in over a decade, including a rare opportunity to float southwestern Coloradoโ€™s spectacular 240-mile-long Dolores River.

โ€œWe havenโ€™t seen this kind of season since 2011,โ€ said Erin Walter, a hydrologist for the National Weather Service based in Grand Junction. โ€œAll the basins are doing well.โ€

The Dolores Basin, in southwestern Colorado, has the highest snowpack in the state, at 254% of average. The Gunnison River Basin stands at 169%, the upper Yampa Basin is at 152%, while the combined Animas, San Miguel, San Juan and Dolores are collectively at 192%. The lowest snowpack numbers are in the South Platte Basin at 98% and the Arkansas Basin at 78%.

โ€œThis is definitely one for the record books,โ€ said Kestrel Kunz, of American Whitewater. โ€œAs a boater Iโ€™m excited. This healthy snowpack is something that everyone can be excited about, regardless of whether youโ€™re a river runner, rancher or restaurant owner.โ€

With that healthy snowpack and higher water comes danger, especially for beginning boaters. Rivers are faster and colder, the difficulty of rapids increases and there is more debris โ€” like fallen trees โ€” in the water and low bridges to watch out for. โ€œSince the pandemic more people have gotten into river recreation so a large part of the population hasnโ€™t seen these kinds of flows,โ€ said Kunz. โ€œWe have to make sure people are accessing the flows and making good decisions about river safety.โ€

Map of the Gunnison River drainage basin in Colorado, USA. Made using public domain USGS data. By Shannon1 – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=69257550

One of the epicenters of this seasonโ€™s higher flows is Almont in the Gunnison River Basin where the East, Taylor and Gunnison rivers come together. The peak flow of the combined rivers may reach a 100-year high, according to the National Weather Service.

โ€œHigh water is a good problem to have,โ€ said Dirk Schumacher, outfitting manager for Three Rivers Rafting in Almont. โ€œThe projections weโ€™re looking at right now, the riverโ€™s going to be high. High but not un-runnable. At normal flows, these are very straightforward Class 3 rivers. At higher water โ€ฆ everything just happens a lot faster.โ€

Schumacher was referring to a river flow rating system in which flows are rated from Class 1 to 5, with 5 being the highest intensity.

Despite the lower snowpack numbers in the Arkansas River Basin, Arkansas Headwaters Recreation Area park manager Tom Waters is optimistic. โ€œWeโ€™re looking at a really good year,โ€ Waters said. โ€œItโ€™s going to be a promising season for rafting and the fishery. I think weโ€™ll see high water but we donโ€™t anticipate really high water or really extended high water. People are already fishing and floating here.โ€

Dolores River watershed

But it is the southwestern corner of the state, on the Dolores River, that is generating the most excitement, said Andy Neinas of Echo Canyon Outfitters in Canon City.

โ€œThe Dolores is a gem among gems,โ€ Neinas said. โ€œBut itโ€™s a river that never runs. There hasnโ€™t been a meaningful boating season on the Dolores in 10 years or longer. This year Americans are going to get to see a wonderful resource that has not been available to them.โ€

How fast or slow the snowpack melts will determine much about the length or brevity of the upcoming boating season. Unusually warm temperatures could send the snowpack rushing downriver all at once creating dangerous conditions and shortening the boating season. Depending on geography, the runoff can begin in early spring, and will have run its course by late summer.

Erin Walter, of the National Weather Service, said a number of variables come in to play, including rain, dust, wind, warm or cold temperatures and soil moisture content.

Dust carried by high winds in April tinted much of Coloradoโ€™s snowpack with a distinctive red coloring. โ€œWhen it collects on snow, dust, being darker, absorbs the solar radiation rather than reflecting it and increases the rate of snow melt. Weโ€™ve also had several years of drought and the soil can suck up a lot of that moisture as well,โ€ she said.

Graham Sexstone, research hydrologist for the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), says the next 30 days will shape the rest of the rafting season.

โ€œA lot depends on the weather over the next month,โ€ Sexstone said. โ€œMany of the USGS stream monitors are showing high flows already and the snowpack above 11,000 feet hasnโ€™t even started to melt. The real runoff hasnโ€™t begun.โ€

Dean Krakel is a photographer and writer based in Almont, Colo. He can be reached atย dkrakel@gmail.com.ย 

The Dolores River, below Slickrock, and above Bedrock. The Dolores River Canyon is included in a proposed National Conservation Area. Photo: Brent Gardner-Smith/Aspen Journalism.

Romancing the River: Is #GlenCanyon Dam an โ€˜Antiqueโ€™? — Sibley’s Rivers #ColoradoRiver #COriver #aridification

Graphic credit: Sibley’s Rivers

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

Yes, that diagram again. I was chastised by readersย last weekย for using it โ€“ partly for the โ€˜Antiqueโ€™ in the diagramโ€™s title, but also for not adequately explaining what the diagram shows. I apologize for the latter. These posts tend to run long and demand a lot more of readers than the 15-second attention span for which Americans are derided. But just to keep them down to a couple thousand words or so, I find myself having to go through some things too quickly in order to get to whatever point I was aiming for. Brevity unfortunately is not the soul of my wit.

But having a sense of the structure and infrastructure of our big dams is critical to understanding what is going on along the Colorado River these days, where it is easy to confuse the river itself (which is experiencing chronic low flows but is not โ€˜drying upโ€™) with the โ€˜river management systemโ€™ (which really could dry up critical stretches of the river under the current management regime). The โ€˜river management systemโ€™ is the integrated set of physical structures along the river for storing the riverโ€™s water and distributing it to users โ€“ and the operating systems whereby those structures are managed.

The โ€˜Supplemental Environmental Impact Studyโ€™ the Bureau of Reclamation is doing now is basically an analysis of its own operating systems for the big structures on the Colorado River, and how those systems might be radically changed with an equitable distribution of impacts on humans โ€“ systems that could have been changed gradually over the past several decades, the past century even, to reflect undeniable evolving realities, both natural and cultural, but now must be done with radical surgery โ€“ the call for an almost-immediate reduction in Lower Basin uses of two million acre-feet.

This might be what life in the Anthropocene will mostly be on many fronts: learning how to live well enough with the world we have imposed on the world we found here. A recreated world where some cultural works were done naively and maybe profligately, under assumptions now needing correction โ€“ which one might hope we will learn to begin sooner rather than later โ€“ or too late, period.

Graphic via Holly McClelland/High Country News.

So it is fitting to look critically at what weโ€™ve done along the โ€˜First River of the Anthropoceneโ€™ โ€“ trying not to fall into hypocritical analysis, gnawing on the hands that feed us. And on that spectrum of critical analysis, I do need to explain, if not defend, using a diagram that calls the โ€˜plumbingโ€™ of a major element in the management system weโ€™ve imposed on the Colorado River โ€˜antique.โ€™

I will say first that I do not necessarily think of โ€˜antiqueโ€™ as a derogatory term (although that was probably intended by the creators of this diagram). If an automobile is fifty years old and still running, it qualifies for an โ€˜antiqueโ€™ license plate; thatโ€™s cool, an achievement for those who kept the car functional. I think of the word as more descriptive than judgmental: an antique is an artifact whose time is past but which reflects that time, something old but with an element of class, something that summons memories of a previous time, a time we want to remember but not necessarily carry forward.

So, being more than 50 years old at this point โ€“ is Glen Canyon Dam an antique? We can start with an examination of its โ€˜plumbing,โ€™ which says something about its life and times. (My doctor uses colonoscopies for a similar analysis.)

1983 – Color photo of Glen Canyon Dam spillway failure from cavitation, via OnTheColorado.com

One piece of plumbing not shown on the diagram is the damโ€™s spillways โ€“ two huge โ€˜drainsโ€™ up at the 3,700-foot elevation, near the damโ€™s 3,715-foot crest (for context, 583 feet above the original streambed). The purpose of the spillways is to keep the reservoir from filling to the point where it would go over the crest. Glen Canyonโ€™s spillways have only been used once, in 1983, when a very wet May and hot June caught the dam managers unaware, with the reservoir already too full to perform its flood-control function. The spillways proved to be not up to the task of getting the flood waters past the dam; the water pouring down them caused a cavitation problem โ€“ a million tiny โ€˜air-hammersโ€™ beating on the concrete with enough cumulative force to break it up. The managers knew there was a problem when large chunks of concrete, then sandstone, started washing out the bottom of the spillway outlets. That threatened the integrity of the dam itself; it was necessary to close off the spillways, lining the top of them with sheets of plywood four feet high and praying that the water would stop rising before it topped the plywood. It did stop in time, and the dam was saved. The spillways were rebuilt, hopefully resolving the cavitation problem, and have not been used since โ€“ and at this point, given the projections about climate change, it is hard to imagine the reservoir ever being that full again. The spillways alone might qualify as โ€˜antiques,โ€™ built for a river that needed them (once) but may no longer exist. (Oh great river gods, please make me eat my words!)

During the 1983 Colorado River flood, described by some as an example of a “black swan” event, sheets of plywood (visible just above the steel barrier) were installed to prevent Glen Canyon Dam from overflowing. Source: Bureau of Reclamation

For the dam managers, however, to โ€˜spillโ€™ water at all is a mark of bad management; their ideal is for every gallon of water contained by the dam to be released through openings 210 feet below the spillways, at hydropower generation level, the 3,490-foot elevation (see diagram). Those openings into the dam drop the water through pentstocks a couple hundred vertical feet to turbines in generators the size of small houses; on its way to its designated use downstream, the water generates electricity. The higher the reservoir level, the more pressure the waterโ€™s weight exerts in pushing the water through the turbines; with the reservoir at high levels, the Glen Canyon generators can produce annually up to five billion kilowatt-hours of electricity. In 2022, however, with the reservoir level only around 35 feet above the pentstock inlets, it only produced 2.6 kilowatt-hours. (Bureau figures)

The Bureauโ€™s semi-panicky call in 2022 for massive reductions in use basin-wide was based on projections forward of another couple water years like the 2020-22 period; under the current river management regime, the level of the reservoir would have dropped below the level of the pentstock intakes in a couple years, and year-round power generation would have been impossible.

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.

Even if that were to happen, however, it would still be possible to move water downstream from Powell Reservoir, through river outlet works with intakes 120 feet lower down in the dam, at the 3,370-foot elevation. The river outlets there are four big pipes, each eight feet in diameter, with a total flow capacity of 15,000 cubic feet per second โ€“ when thereโ€™s a lot of water in the reservoir to push water through them. If the water pressure stayed at that level, and all four tubes worked 24/7/365, it would be possible to move around 10 million acre-feet (maf) through the dam annually and down to Mead Reservoir, roughly the amount the Bureau has been releasing from Mead for Lower Basin and Mexican use โ€“ plus the system losses for which no one has wanted to claim responsibility.

That 10 maf leaving the system at the lower end obviously becomes problematic if only 6-8 maf are flowing into the system at the upper end, as has been the recent situation. For one thing, the Bureau is not sure the outlet works can stand that kind of constant use; they are getting old, and may not have been built for constant use anyway. So if the Bureau were able to keep only three tubes running all the time, with one in maintenance mode, the amount of water that could be moved at full pressure would drop to just about the Upper Basinโ€™s Colorado River Compact commitment โ€“ 7.5 maf plus the Upper Basinโ€™s share of the Mexican obligation (750,000 af).

But as the water level in the reservoir dropped closer to the outlet works intakes โ€“ 6-7 maf inflow minus 8 maf outflow equals a storage decrease of 1-2 maf/year โ€“ the water pressure through the tubes would also drop, and below the 3,430-foot elevation, it would no longer be possible to push the full Upper Basin commitment to the Lower Basin and Mexico through the tubes.

Map credit: AGU

Worst case โ€“ if the reservoir level dropped below the 3,370-foot elevation, it would no longer be possible to move any water at all past the dam, even though there would still be just under two million acre-feet left in storage โ€“ the โ€˜dead pool.โ€™ At that point, the Lower Basin states would either have to do something completely nonconstructive like sue somebody (Upper Basin states? Interior Department? The Bureau?), or argue about which states should pay how much to Upper Basin water users to let their water (not federally controlled) flow to Powell to try to raise the level back above the 3,370-foot elevation. And most of the Upper Basin water rights junior to the Compact are not a bunch of rugged individualist farmers and ranchers; they are the big transmountain diverters โ€“ Coloradoโ€™s Front Range cities, the Santa Fe-Albuquerque corridor, the Salt Lake basin, who are already โ€˜lawyered up.โ€™

The ramshackle โ€˜Law of the River,โ€™ grounded in appropriation law and followed to the letter of the laws, would have nothing to offer to relieve that situation; it is easier to imagine Paolo Bacigalupiโ€™s โ€˜Water Knifeโ€™ war commencing.

That is an overview of Glen Canyon Damโ€™s plumbing โ€“ pretty standard for a big 20th century dam, designed to operate optimally when the reservoir is more than two-thirds full and able to maintain a full power head in releasing water through the turbines for โ€“ oh yeah, not primarily power generation, but the damโ€™s main job of providing dependable water for agricultural and domestic users downstream. A specific warning in the Colorado River Compact (IV(b)).

Now to the question: is Glen Canyon Dam an โ€˜antiqueโ€™? I think, at this point, given the prognostications for the future of the regional water supply, we could truly say that the dam was built for a different era, a different river โ€“ some of which river may have existed only in the minds of the dam builders. The โ€˜Hassayampa romance,โ€™ carried along, like Deacon Holmesโ€™ wonderful one-hoss shay, โ€˜for a century to the dayโ€™ โ€“ the day the Bureau finally abandoned its paper surplus calculations and called a shortage.

In addition to working on new river operation protocols, the Bureau now has a team working on ways to possibly modify the dam, undoubtedly at considerable cost, maybe enlarging the outlet works, maybe generating some flow of electricity through openings lower in the dam, and maybe constructing tunnels to bypass the dam entirely, leaving Mead Reservoir as the riverโ€™s major storage.

The latter concept could relieve a problem that the dam has created for โ€˜todayโ€™s riverโ€™ through the Grand Canyon: the beaches and sandbars that are essential as night stops for the billion-dollar Grand Canyon recreational boating industry are eroding away, with no replacement sand and silt getting past the dam. This is being dealt with now by occasional staged โ€˜floodsโ€™ like the one just recently: pouring 200,000-plus acre feet of water over 2-3 days down through the Grand Canyon to stir up sediment that has slumped from the beaches down into the riverbed, in hopes that it will be redeposited on a beach downstream. Ultimately this mostly just escalates the passage downstream of all the beach material with only irregular and inadequate deposits of new material from side streams. That this ultimate losing effort was done in April 2023, with Powell Reservoir under 30 percent full, but anticipating a runoff thatย mightย get it all the way up to half-full or only half-empty, depending on your psychological inclinationโ€ฆ. Thereโ€™s an underlying desperation there that is not goimng to let us look back on this period with any pleasant sense of nostalgia. But we might look back on antiquities like Glen Canyon Dam as a reminder of the consequences of operating on assumptions and standards not fully grounded in demonstrable reality.

A problem with this analysis, however, is that for better or worse, it evaluates Glen Canyon Dam out of context. To really understand why we have Glen Canyon Dam at all, it is necessary to see our riverโ€™s physical structures in the larger context of the less visible political and legal infrastructure that led us to pile five million yards of concrete (with internal plumbing) in the riverโ€™s path in that particular place. That is another great story in the evolution of this mixed bag we call America. Up next in a couple weeks; stay tuned.

Delph Carpenter’s original map showing a reservoir at Glen Canyon and one at Black Canyon via Greg Hobbs

Snowmelt #Runoff Season Has Begun Across #Colorado: In addition to above normal #snowpack across much of the state, primarily in Western Colorado, lower elevation snowpack were particularly plentiful leading to substantial early season runoff in some basins — NRCS

San Juan Mountains. Photo credit: NRCS

Click the link to read the release on the NRCS website:

Denver, CO โ€“ May 4th, 2023ย โ€“ In addition to above normal snowpack across much of the state, primarily in Western Colorado, lower elevation snowpack were particularly plentiful leading to substantial early season runoff in some basins. Along with this low elevation snowmelt, significant flooding has already been observed in the Yampa and Dolores basins with still much more snowmelt to come. While much of Western Colorado experienced above normal April streamflow volumes this was not the case across the entire state. NRCS Hydrologist Karl Wetlaufer commented โ€œPeak snowpack and streamflow forecasts for the full April-July runoff period vary widely across the state this year. While much of Western Colorado should expect a continuing trend of above normal streamflow, much of the Arkansas and South Platte basins are forecasted for well below normal seasonal runoff volumes.โ€ Portions of the Colorado River headwaters and portions of the Rio Grande River basins are also anticipated to have below normal streamflow over the coming month.

May 1, 2023 Colorado streamflow forecast. Map credit: NRCS

Reservoir storage has begun to improve in the basins with the biggest deficits, namely the Gunnison and the combined San Miguel-Dolores-Animas-San Juan River basins, with most other basins holding near normal storage values. With several months of snowmelt runoff still to come, it is anticipated that reservoir storages will be changing considerably as the season progresses. Given the high degree of variability in streamflow forecasts across the state it is recommended to pay close attention to forecasts and changing conditions in your local area throughout the spring and summer.

Statewide snowpack, as measured at SNOTEL sites, peaked on April 8thย prompting the start of the primary snowmelt runoff season. As days get longer and the sun gets higher in the sky, snowmelt rates have the potential to continue to accelerate. Hydrologist Wetlaufer notes โ€œThis is an incredibly important time of year for water resources. Conditions can change quickly and is important to monitor changing conditions closely over the coming months depending on the needs of water resource management in a given basin.โ€ Wetlaufer continued โ€œIn a year like this, some areas may need to be planning activities such as reservoir management with flood potential in mind while in areas with lesser streamflow forecasts conservation may need to be the focus.โ€ While plentiful streamflow are certainly good news from a strictly water supply standpoint in the greater Colorado River Basin (above Lake Powell) it is important for everyone in Colorado to be mindful of flood potential and those associated hazards.

May 1, 2023 Colorado reservoir storage. Credit: NRCS

For more details see the May 1stย Water Supply Outlook Report.

River levels expected to close #Colorado 141 between #Naturita and #Gateway — The #Montrose Daily Press #DoloresRiver #runoff

A photo captured on May 3, 2023 shows the Dolores River flowing underneath a CDOT bridge structure located on Colorado Highway 141 at mile point 88.5. River flow rates are nearing 10-year flood event levels. (Courtesy photo/CDOT)

Click the link to read the release from the Colorado Department of Transportation on The Montrose Daily Press website:

The Colorado Department of Transportation is strongly considering closing Colorado 141 between Naturita and Gateway Friday evening, May 5, due to water levels on the Dolores River and extra caution over the structural integrity of the bridge at Roc Creek.

If the river reaches expected levels, CDOTย plans to close the highway at 5 p.m. Friday, with the highway remaining closed until the flood danger has subsided. According to a CDOT news release, the closure is dependent on various factors, including snowmelt and reservoir releases. As flow amounts fluctuate, the bridge over Roc Creek may require additional closures

โ€œRiver flows in the area have not been observed at these levels in 18 years. With the flood event expected to peak this Friday, we are taking proactive and cautionary measures at this particular bridge. Engineers and maintenance personnel will be assessing the structural integrity throughout this high-flow event,โ€ Regional Transportation Director Julie Constan said in the news release.

For safety, CDOT has determined that the bridge structure at Roc Creek should be closed to traffic while peak water flows are occurring. The structure is located approximately 27.5 miles north of Naturita at mile point 88.5. The northbound closure point is located north of Naturita and the County Road CC junction at mile point 64. The southbound closure point is just south of Gateway, at mile point 110.

CDOT hydraulics engineers are closely watching forecasts, as well as tracking the anticipated releases from McPhee Reservoir in Montezuma County, CDOT spokeswoman Lisa Schwantes said.

โ€œItโ€™s going to be a combination of those things that really have an effect on how high the water flow is,โ€ she said. With respect to whether CDOT in fact closes 141: โ€œWeโ€™re leaning toward the side of caution.โ€

The National Weather Service (NWS) has issued a flood advisory for the Dolores River due to the increased release of water from McPhee Reservoir. The flood advisory also includes the Dolores and San Miguel Rivers due to heavy runoff from snowmelt. The flood advisory is in place until further notice and covers Montrose County, as well as the counties of Montezuma, Dolores and San Miguel.

CDOT is less concerned that water will overflow the top of the bridge โ€” projections have the river hitting about 2 to 4 feet below. Rather, the concern is how the bridge structure might respond to a high flow at a rate not seen in close to 20 years, Schwantes said. There is some concern about the bridge piers, as well as large debris that could wash down and lodge beneath it.

โ€œWeโ€™re confident of the integrity of the bridge, but we donโ€™t want anyone driving over it when those high peak flows are occurring,โ€ she said.

The northbound closure point is located north of Naturita and the County Road CC junction at mile point 64. The southbound closure point is just south of Gateway, at mile point 110.

Mcphee dam

The National Weather Service (NWS) has issued a flood advisory for the Dolores River due to the increased release of water from McPhee Reservoir. The flood advisory also includes the Dolores and San Miguel Rivers due to heavy runoff from snowmelt. The flood advisory is in place until further notice and covers Montrose County, as well as the counties of Montezuma, Dolores and San Miguel.

The May 1, 2023 #Colorado #Water Supply Outlook Report is hot off the presses from the NRCS #snowpack #runoff

Click the link to access the report on the NRCS website. Here’s an excerpt:

#Drought news May 4, 2023: Rainfall of 1.5 to 2 inches, or more, during the past week along with SPI at various time scales and soil moisture supported a 1 to 2-category improvement to S.E. #Colorado

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

A pair of low pressure systems tracked from the Southeast northward along the East Coast, bringing a swath of widespread precipitation (2 to 4 inches, locally more) to much of the East Coast at the end of April. During the final week of April, the Southern Great Plains along with the Lower Mississippi Valley also received widespread precipitation with amounts exceeding 2 inches across southeastern Colorado, northern and eastern Oklahoma, and northeastern Texas. Late April was mostly dry across the Central to Northern Great Plains and Middle Mississippi Valley. Little to no precipitation was observed throughout the West where a significant warmup at the end of April resulted in rapid snowmelt, runoff, and flooding along streams and rivers. In contrast to these above-normal temperatures, cooler-than-normal temperatures occurred across the Great Plains, Corn Belt, and much of the East from April 25 to May 1…

High Plains

Rainfall of 1.5 to 2 inches, or more, during the past week along with SPI at various time scales and soil moisture supported a 1 to 2-category improvement to southeastern Colorado. For similar reasons, a 1-category improvement was made to southwestern Kansas. However, 12-month SPI still supports D3-D4 across much of western and central KS. Wichita has only received 0.72 inches of precipitation from March 1 to April 30, which made it the 2nd driest March and April on record and the driest since 1936. Based on the NDMC’s short and long-term objective blends and CPC’s leaky bucket soil moisture, D1-D3 expansion was warranted for northern Kansas and south-central Nebraska. D3 was increased westward across west-central Nebraska following a very dry April. North Platte tied the driest April on record. Degradations were also made to southeastern Kansas based on 60 to 120-day SPEI. Abnormal dryness (D0) coverage increased in northeastern Wyoming based on recent dryness and declining soil moisture. A small improvement was made to the southwest corner of South Dakota, based on a local report that was consistent with VegDri and objective drought blends…

Colorado Drought Monitor one week change map ending May 2, 2023.

West

30 to 60-day SPI along with soil moisture indicators support an expansion of abnormal dryness (D0) and moderate drought (D1) across southeastern Montana. 30 to 90-day SPIs, recent warmth, and soil moisture led to a 1-category degradation in northwestern Montana. Following major improvements during the past few months across California and the Great Basin, no changes were made this week after little or no precipitation. Drought of varying intensity is designated for parts of Oregon and northern Idaho where precipitation averaged below-normal for the Water Year to Date (October 1, 2022 to May 1, 2023)…`

South

Balancing longer term SPIs and recent widespread rainfall (1 to 3.5 inches), a 1-category improvement was made to parts of Oklahoma and Texas. Improvements were also made to parts of central Texas along with the Texas Gulf Coast after more than 1.5 inches of rainfall this past week. CPCโ€™s leaky bucket soil moisture and 90 to 120-day SPI supported a slight expansion of moderate (D1) to severe (D2) drought in west-central Texas. Based on soil moisture considerations and impact reports (very dry pastures), extreme (D3) drought was increased in coverage across the Texas Panhandle. The addition of abnormal dryness (D0) in east-central Tennessee was based on increasing 30-day deficits, SPEI, soil moisture, and 28-day average streamflows…

Looking Ahead

During the next five days (May 4 – 8, 2023), moderate to heavy precipitation (0.5-1.5 inches, locally more) is forecast for the Pacific Northwest, Great Basin, Northern Rockies, and higher elevations of California. An active weather pattern is expected from the Great Plains east to the Mississippi Valley with varying 5-day precipitation amounts forecast. Following a very wet end to April along the East Coast, drier weather is forecast to be accompanied by a gradual warming trend across the East.

The Climate Prediction Centerโ€™s 6-10 day outlook (valid May 9-13) favors below-normal temperatures across the West, while above-normal temperatures are more likely throughout the central and eastern U.S. Elevated probabilities for above-normal precipitation are forecast for the Pacific Northwest, northern California, Great Plains, Mississippi Valley, and Southeast. Near normal precipitation amounts are favored for much of the Great Lakes and Northeast.

US Drought Monitor one week change map ending May 2, 2023.

Just for grins here’s a gallery of US Drought Monitor maps for early May for the past few years.

The Water Brokers: A small #Nevada company spent decades buying #water. As the West dries up, itโ€™s cashing out — Grist

Photo credit: Mikayla Whitmore/Grist

Click the link to read the article on the Grist website (Jake Bittle):

For the first two decades of the 21st century, not even a once-in-a-millennium drought could deter real estate developers from building vast suburban tracts on the wild edges of Western U.S. cities. But in 2021, a reckoning appeared on the horizon. The Colorado River sank to historic lows, winter rains never arrived, and communities from California to Texas found their groundwater wells going dry after decades of overuse.

Western officials had seldom let questions about water availability get in the way of population growth, but suddenly they seemed to have no other choice. Faced with an unprecedented shortage, many local governments tried to pump the brakes on new developments. A small town in Utah halted all new housing permits, fearful that more homes would sap a local river. A suburb of Colorado Springs, Colorado, told developers that it could no longer allow new subdivisions to connect to the cityโ€™s water system. Most significantly, the state of Arizona has all but paused new housing in some Phoenix suburbs, citing a shortage of groundwater.

This pivot to conservation was bad news for D.R. Horton, the nationโ€™s largest homebuilding company. Buoyed by pandemic-induced demand for cheap, spacious housing across the West, Horton netted $6 billion constructing more than 80,000 homes last year alone. The company had long been able to assume that if it built a development, someone else would provide water for it โ€” usually a local government eager for tax revenue. All of a sudden, Horton had to find the water itself.

Luckily, there was a third party who could help.

In April of last year, Horton acquired Vidler Water Company, a tiny outfit whose dozen employees worked out of an unassuming faux-Mediterranean office park in Carson City, Nevada. Though Vidlerโ€™s annual revenue was less than a tenth of a percent of Hortonโ€™s, the real estate titan spent big to snap it up: The price tag on the acquisition was an eye-popping $291 million.

Vidler is an unusual company. It doesnโ€™t actually deliver water to people, nor does it own any facilities for water treatment or desalination. Instead the company functions as a broker for water rights, finding untapped water in rural communities and marketing it to developers and corporations in fast-growing cities and suburbs. For 20 years, the company has bought up remote farmland and drilled wells in bone-dry valleys to amass an enormous private water portfolio, then made tens of millions of dollars by selling that portfolio one piece at a time.

This kind of business inevitably involves some guesswork, and often that guesswork looks like classic real estate speculation: You can make money by bringing water to places where people already want it, but you can make even more money bringing it to places where people will want it in the future. This is exactly what Vidler has tried to do, and it has led the companyโ€™s critics to contend that its business model violates the anti-speculation spirit of Western water law.

Indeed, suspicions that Vidler is profiteering off a vulnerable public resource have made the company more than its share of enemies over the years: Top officials have been pilloried in courtrooms and threatened by rural residents, and an early executive once had to jump out a window to escape an angry crowd at a public meeting.

Hortonโ€™s purchase of Vidler has no real precedent, but it is a clear indication of where the West is headed. The region has grown twice as fast as the rest of the United States since the 1950s, and national builders like Horton are relying on it to fuel future profits. If these companies want to capitalize on migration to the booming suburbs of Phoenix and Las Vegas, theyโ€™ll need to find creative new water supplies that will allow them to keep building even as regulators try to clamp down on unsustainable growth.

In this regard, Vidler is a pioneer. The company was the first in the West to make a business model out of finding and flipping water. In the past few years, a new crop of upstarts has sought to mimic this model, buying up water rights in rural areas and marketing them to developers and suburbs that need them for future growth. These companies include Water Asset Management, which has bought up agricultural land in Colorado to secure water rights, and the investment firm Greenstone, which organized a first-of-its-kind deal to move Colorado River water from farms in western Arizona to a city near Phoenix. Both companies boast former Vidler executives in top leadership positions.

Vidler still stands at the front of the pack, tapping water in hard-to-reach aquifers and pursuing aggressive litigation to push new construction forward. If the companyโ€™s tactics become more common, the effects will be far-reaching โ€” not only could rural areas and desert ecosystems see their precious water siphoned off, but thousands of people will buy and occupy homes fed by water sources that may turn out to be unreliable. A major part of Vidlerโ€™s strategy has been to pump water from small underground aquifers, squeezing every available drop from finite water banks that may someday run dry, especially as climate change contributes to the long-term aridification of the West

Kevin Brown is the manager of a water utility in the southern Nevada city of Mesquite, where Vidler has been trying for years to build a pipeline that could bring new water to the city. The company has proposed tapping a virgin aquifer and using the water to supply new housing developments on the edge of town, but Brown doubts the pipeline is a good idea. Instead he has focused on reducing water usage across the city and recycling water where he can.

Vacant land in Lincoln County, Nevada, near the city of Mesquite. Vidler owns a large portfolio of water assets in the area that could enable further development. Grist / Mikayla Whitmore

โ€œIn the world we live in, and the market we live in, if you put enough money against it, someone will make it happen,โ€ Brown told Grist. โ€œIf these developers arenโ€™t building homes, then theyโ€™re going out of business. But at some point, somebody needs to say, โ€˜You know what, we canโ€™t grow anymore. Itโ€™s not sustainable.โ€™โ€


In most Western states, water is public property regardless of whose land it flows through or sits under. Private entities can only own the right to use that water for a specific purpose. Individuals and companies can apply to use any unclaimed water source, but they have to convince the state government that they plan to put the water to a productive use. By the same token, owners can sell or lease their existing water rights to each other as long as the buyers keep using the water for something.

In this arrangement, the new breed of water brokers has found an opportunity to accumulate assets and generate profits. But the law requires them to tread cautiously.

At the turn of the 20th century, a Transcontinental Mining executive named Rees Vidler tried to dig a tunnel through the heart of the Colorado Rockies. It was supposed to link the mineral-rich mountain towns around Breckenridge with the young Denver metro area, but Vidler never completed the project. The shaft sat unused until an engineer bought it in the 1950s and repurposed it to move water rather than ore. He acquired the rights to river water on the Breckinridge side of the tunnel, built a water pipeline through the shaft, and proposed to sell the river water to people in the fast-growing cities around Denver. The engineer didnโ€™t have any confirmed buyers for the water, but he could store it in a reservoir until he made a sale.

In 1979, the Colorado Supreme Court dealt a blow to that scheme. A judge ruled that the engineerโ€™s water purchases were โ€œgrounded on no interest beyond a desire to obtain water for sale.โ€ If Colorado allowed such purchases, it would โ€œencourage those with vast monetary resources to monopolize [water] for personal profit rather than beneficial use,โ€ the court wrote. In other words, speculating on water was unacceptable. Judges in other states soon adopted similar rulings, creating a precedent that some legal scholars have called โ€œthe Vidler doctrine.โ€

Vidler tunnel entrance and exit, Summit County side of range. Date: [1900-1905]. Summary: An “X” on the image marks the spot of the Vidler tunnel portal in a gulch above timberline, Summit County, Colorado. Men pose near a log cabin in the foreground. Photo credit: Brandes, Juan F via Denver Public Library

About 15 years later, the Vidler tunnel and its water rights fell into the possession of one John Hart, a swashbuckling financier who was beginning a decades-long corporate takeover spree. Hart and his business partner had just taken over the Physicians Insurance Company of Ohio, or PICO. They transformed the moribund Midwestern insurance company into an umbrella corporation for buying and flipping distressed assets, including a Swiss railway operator, an Australian oil company, a million acres of rural land in Nevada, and a canola-seed crushing facility.

The Vidler tunnelโ€™s history gave Hart an idea. He lived near San Diego, which relies in part on the Colorado River, and he could see that water was only going to get more valuable across the region, especially if real estate kept booming. Many farmers who had fallen on hard times were selling their irrigated land to developers, who repurposed irrigation water to supply new homes and golf courses. Hart wanted to profit from this slow transition away from agriculture, and he thought he saw a way to do it: Buy up water rights in the driest states, wait for the rights to rise in value, and sell them later on to developers that needed them for new housing. As long as the population of the West continued to increase, the price of water would increase as well โ€” and with it PICOโ€™s investment profits.  

By acting as a broker for water rights, the PICO subsidiary that Hart called Vidler Water Company could get around the anti-speculation doctrine invoked in its very name. The tunnel engineer had sought to hold onto his water rights and make money by selling water to people who needed it. Vidler would just buy and sell the water rights themselves. This amounted to an elegant form of arbitrage: If a water right was worth more to a developer than it was to a farmer, Vidler could profit by flipping the right from the latter to the former.

The only problem was that Hart didnโ€™t know very much about the nitty-gritty details of water law, and he knew even less about the science of hydrology. In order for his plan to work, he had to find someone who could handle both. That someone was Dorothy Timian-Palmer, an engineer who had been Carson Cityโ€™s municipal utilities director for around a decade before Hart poached her in 1997. Timian-Palmer declined to speak with Grist, but several sources who worked with and against Vidler described her as one of the nationโ€™s foremost water experts.

โ€œShe is the most knowledgeable person about water in the country,โ€ insisted Hart in an interview. He recalled how he and Timian-Palmer used to attend investment conferences where skeptical audiences heard the legendary oil tycoon T. Boone Pickens talk in vague and confused terms about his water investments. But when Timian-Palmer took the stage, introduced herself as a water engineer, and started rattling off facts about hydrology and hydraulics, all the attendees perked up and started taking notes. 

โ€œSheโ€™s very smart, very shrewd, and very tough,โ€ said Paul Hultin, a lawyer who sued Vidler over one of its later projects in New Mexico.

Armed with an infusion of cash from PICO, Timian-Palmer and a small group of Nevada-based lawyers and engineers set about flipping water. They bought agricultural water rights along a river in Colorado and sold them to Denver-area developers. They bought tens of thousands of acres of farm- and ranchland in Arizona, Idaho, Nevada, and New Mexico and either sold the water rights to urban utilities, leased them back to farmers, or sold the land to developers. In one case the company made a fivefold profit after six years.

Credit: Grist / Jessie Blaeser

When developers wanted to use the water theyโ€™d just acquired on former farmland, they could fallow the irrigated fields and start pumping water into their subdivisions and power plants, fueling further housing expansion. Marc Reisner, the journalist who wrote that โ€œwater flows uphill towards moneyโ€ in his seminal book Cadillac Desert, also joined Vidler for a few years as a part-time political consultant, believing the companyโ€™s projects could enable growth while avoiding the construction of harmful new reservoirs and dams.

In other cases, Vidler chose to sit on the water it acquired until its value went up. In California and Arizona, the company bought and stored water in so-called โ€œunderground storage facilities,โ€ artificial aquifers that serve as subterranean reservoirs. The cities and farmers who typically use these kinds of water banks are usually trying to squirrel away water for use during dry years, but Vidlerโ€™s goal was to profit on the gradual increase in water prices. 

In Californiaโ€™s agriculture-heavy Central Valley, for instance, the company took partial ownership of an artificial aquifer, then flipped its share to real estate developers and water utilities, making $25 million off the transaction in just a few years. In Arizona, meanwhile, the company built its own large storage facility west of Phoenix and filled it with more than 250,000 acre-feet of water from the Colorado River. (An acre-foot is equivalent to around 326,000 gallons, or roughly enough water to supply two homes for a year.) Vidler executives wrote in a 2004 financial statement that โ€œcontinued growth of the municipalities surrounding Phoenixโ€ and โ€œthe low level of Lake Mead,โ€ the largest Colorado River reservoir, were both โ€œlikely to increase demandโ€ for the water.

No one has ever accused the company of breaking the law with these transactions, but its strategy clashed with the legal principles established in the 1979 ruling against the original Vidler tunnel scheme. In order for Vidler to secure new water rights, it had to identify a โ€œbeneficial useโ€ for each water source it wanted to claim. The company would tell state regulators that it wanted to use each given water right to supply a power plant, or a suburban development, or a farm. In its own financial statements, though, the company made it clear that using water was merely incidental to the companyโ€™s mission.

โ€œVidler seeks to acquire water rights at prices consistent with their current use, with the expectation of an increase in value if the water right can be converted to a higher use,โ€ the company said in a 2001 annual report. โ€œVidlerโ€™s priority is to develop recurring cash flow from these assets.โ€

Rural housing in Dayton, Nevada, east of Carson City. Vidler owns water rights in the area and has sought to market them to developers. Grist / Mikayla Whitmore

Kyle Roerink, a water-conservation advocate who runs the nonprofit Great Basin Water Network, told Grist that heโ€™s observed Vidler trying to find ways around the โ€œbeneficial useโ€ doctrine for almost a decade.

โ€œItโ€™s a model where youโ€™re trying to squeeze blood, profits, and water from stone, and theyโ€™ve been pretty successful at it,โ€ he said. โ€œ[Theyโ€™re] pushing the boundaries and testing the limits of what the foundational principles of Western water law are. Itโ€™s among the most dangerous elements of capitalism at play here.โ€ 

Indeed, Vidlerโ€™s loose regard for beneficial-use requirements has sometimes landed the company in hot water. In 1999, Vidler asked Nevada officials for permission to pump around 2,000 acre-feet of groundwater in Sandy Valley, a remote community of trailers and tumbleweeds about an hour southwest of Las Vegas. Vidler claimed to be applying for the water on behalf of a real estate company in Primm, a casino town on the California border. It laid out a far-fetched plan to build a pipeline that would move Sandy Valleyโ€™s water down to Primm across 25 miles of mountains, allowing developers to build housing and a theme park. The state government gave Vidler only some of the rights it asked for โ€” but it amounted to almost as much water as the entire town of Sandy Valley used at the time.

When Sandy Valley residents heard about the project, they were furious. The areaโ€™s aquifer was already overdrawn thanks to a number of irrigated farms nearby. Residents depended on shallow household wells for their water, and they were terrified that those wells would go dry if the state let Vidler take its share.

โ€œVidler is a four-letter word here in Sandy Valley,โ€ Al Marquis told me when I visited the town in February. A retired real estate lawyer who sued to stop Vidler on behalf of his town, Marquis is a quintessential Sandy Valley personality: He wears a ten-gallon-hat, flies amateur planes, and writes books of what he calls โ€œcowboy poetry.โ€ He recalled that a Vidler representative who showed up at a public meeting about the application found himself greeted by shouts and death threats from angry residents, who reminded him in no uncertain terms that nearly everyone in the valley owned a firearm.

In 2006, a judge overturned the state governmentโ€™s decision to grant Vidlerโ€™s application, ruling that the company hadnโ€™t proven it could put Sandy Valleyโ€™s water to beneficial use. Vidler claimed that the Primm real estate company needed the water to build apartments and a theme park, but the company couldnโ€™t demonstrate that any of that development was really going to happen โ€” the main evidence it had was a one-page wishlist drafted by the real estate company itself. In the absence of a clear beneficial use, the judge wrote, Vidler had no claim to Sandy Valleyโ€™s water, and the state had erred in giving the company permission to pump.

โ€œIt appears to me that the company was formed for the sole purpose of speculating in and the hoarding of a public resource,โ€ Marquis told Grist. He hypothesized that Vidler never wanted the water for Primm at all, and instead just wanted to flip it to someone else later on. โ€œI gotta give them credit, in that they had foresight.โ€

Timian-Palmer and her fellow executives saw that the West didnโ€™t have enough water, and they knew that was good news for Vidler: As drought got worse, the companyโ€™s assets would only get more valuable.


As the nationโ€™s housing market boomed in the early 2000s, Vidler evolved. Instead of just buying and selling water rights that were already in use, the company began to search for unclaimed groundwater in remote parts of Nevada. It drilled new wells to bring that water to the surface, built new infrastructure to move it toward big cities like Reno and Las Vegas, and marketed it to developers and utilities. If Vidler could sell a new water source for more than it cost to develop and transport the water, the company would turn a profit. 

โ€œThere seemed to be a void in terms of developing new supplies of water,โ€ said Hart, explaining the opportunity. โ€œGovernments donโ€™t really like to spend money for future citizens or future residents, and developers donโ€™t want the upfront risk of having to go out to develop water for projects somewhere down the road.โ€ 

Updated Colorado River 4-Panel plot thru Water Year 2022 showing reservoirs, flows, temperatures and precipitation. All trends are in the wrong direction. Since original 2017 plot, conditions have deteriorated significantly. Brad Udall via Twitter: https://twitter.com/bradudall/status/1593316262041436160

At the same time, major water sources like the Colorado River were showing signs of vulnerability as the region entered its current climate-fueled megadrought, lending more urgency to the search for untapped water. It could take years to secure regulatory approval for new groundwater pumping and even longer to build infrastructure to move that water around. Hart and Timian-Palmer were some of the only people in the West with the capital and expertise needed to pursue this kind of project.

The companyโ€™s first major experiment was a public-private partnership with a massive rural county about an hour north of Vegas. Lincoln County is one of the most sparsely populated counties in the nation โ€” its population of 4,500 occupies a land area larger than Massachusetts โ€” but it also boasted a hoard of untapped groundwater, most of which no one had ever tried to use. This water sits in some of the stateโ€™s shallowest and most remote aquifers, where it has accreted over thousands of years beneath chalk-white valleys.

In the late 1980s, Las Vegasโ€™s powerful water utility filed applications for almost all of Lincoln Countyโ€™s unused water, more than 100,000 acre-feet in total, and proposed to build a pipeline that could bring it to Sin City. Officials in Lincoln County were still trying to fend off the big city when Vidler showed up and offered to act as a white knight. The company said it would invest millions of dollars to find and pump the countyโ€™s groundwater resources while also protecting those resources from Las Vegas. In exchange the company would get half the proceeds from any water the county sold. 

Depending on whom you ask, this was either a boon for an impoverished rural county or a corporate takeover of a public resource. Wade Poulsen, the county employee who runs the water partnership, told Grist that Vidler had been โ€œfantasticโ€ and claimed that the county โ€œwould be nowhere without them.โ€ But conservationists allege that Vidler was mining Lincoln Countyโ€™s resources for profit.

โ€œVidler has turned Lincoln County into a water colony,โ€ said Patrick Donnelly, a conservation biologist with the nonprofit Center for Biological Diversity who has litigated against groundwater usage in Nevada. โ€œThey own some serious water up there, and thereโ€™s this ideology of, โ€˜This water exists for us to benefit economically from it.โ€™โ€

The business thesis for the Lincoln-Vidler partnership was based on the assumption that the growth of Las Vegas would one day extend so far that it crossed the border into Lincoln County, more than 50 miles away from the cityโ€™s downtown. In the heady days of the early 2000s housing boom, this seemed like a real possibility; a number of real estate developers had staked out housing projects that could use Lincoln Countyโ€™s water. 

Chief among them was Harvey Whittemore, a friend of the late Senator Harry Reid and powerful casino lobbyist, who agreed to buy 1,000 acre-feet of water rights from Vidler in 2005. Before he went to prison for campaign finance violations in 2014, Whittemore spent more than a decade trying to build a megadevelopment called Coyote Springs in Lincoln County, pitching it as a desert metropolis that would someday contain 160,000 homes.

Highway 93 near Coyote Springs, Nevada, where the casino lobbyist Harvey Whittemore tried to use Vidlerโ€™s water to build a massive desert city. Grist / Mikayla Whitmore

He managed to build a golf course on the development site, but a regulatory battle subsequently derailed the project and Whittemore never used Vidlerโ€™s water. Whittemoreโ€™s green, which was designed by golf legend Jack Nicklaus, still stands by itself on an empty desert highway, flanked by a massive sign announcing the future site of Coyote Springs, which another company is still trying to push forward. A tortoise habitat sits just a few feet away.

โ€œThey said at first they were gonna provide water for everybody, but the only people that [the Lincoln County partnership] ever actually tried to develop water for were [real estate developers],โ€ said Louis Benezet, a longtime county resident. He said the water district initially discussed agricultural projects and growth opportunities in the countyโ€™s small towns, which were more attractive to county residents, but later focused on exporting water toward Vegas. 

Timian-Palmer also pursued a similar strategy in fast-growing Reno in the early 2000s, targeting a property called Fish Springs Ranch about an hour north of the city. The land under the ranch contained enough groundwater for thousands of homes, and officials in the Reno area had long eyed it as a water source that could reduce the cityโ€™s reliance on the Truckee River, which drains out of Lake Tahoe. Instead of asking the local utility to help with the costs, as past entrepreneurs had, Vidler used private capital to push the project forward. The company built a pipeline that snaked through 28 miles of hilly terrain, ending in a cluster of valleys that were primed for future construction.

It was a transaction only Timian-Palmer could have managed, and one that demonstrated Vidlerโ€™s clout on water issues: Getting permission to build the project required conducting multiple federal environmental reviews, placating officials in multiple states, negotiating with the nearby Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe, and passing a bill to ratify the details in Congress. Even after spending almost $100 million to permit and build the project, Vidler still stood to profit by selling the water to developers in Renoโ€™s suburbs โ€” there were almost no alternative water sources in the valleys north of Reno, so Vidler would be able to set the price.

Alas, Hart and Timian-Palmer had terrible timing. Just as the companyโ€™s projects in Reno and Vegas seemed to be taking off, the U.S. housing market started to wobble, led by a wave of foreclosures in Nevada and other Western states. When the market collapsed, builders and developers nixed all their suburban development projects, sold off their land, and pulled out of their agreements to buy water from Vidler. The company had moved heaven and earth to secure water for Nevadaโ€™s future growth, but that growth seemed to evaporate overnight.

โ€œWhen Vidler started construction on the pipeline project, essentially, all of the water was spoken for,โ€ said John Enloe, an official at the water utility that serves the Reno area. Enloe worked with Vidler on the pipeline project. โ€œBy the time construction was completed, the Great Recession hit, and everyone backed out. There just wasnโ€™t a need for the water.โ€

Even as the housing market started to rebound from the Great Recession, Vidler spent much of the next decade running up against a very simple problem: The company had spent millions of dollars to develop new water resources across the West, paying to drill test wells and fill out lengthy water-right applications with the state government, but it couldnโ€™t find buyers for all the new water it had developed. 

That was in part because regulators had started to question the logic of growth. By the time the Western real estate market surged back to life in the late 2010s, the megadrought that gripped the region was well into its second decade. Major reservoirs in the Sierra Nevada and the Colorado River were bottoming out, and many rural communities were starting to see their wells go dry. This shortage had begun to stoke new concerns about overreliance on groundwater, and Vidler soon found itself facing new opposition from courts and regulators. 

In a sign of its commitment to aiding development, Vidler fought back against these restrictions with a vengeance, litigating and lobbying to ensure its projects could move forward.

A case in New Mexico demonstrated how aggressive the company could be in snapping up water. In the early 2000s, as Vidler was looking to expand into the state, Timian-Palmer connected with a rancher named Rob Gately. Gately owned a large chunk of land in the mountains east of Albuquerque and was seeking to build a big suburban development on the empty parcel. The area was far from prime real estate: It boasted a few dozen houses scattered across a stretch of wind-blown desert, but nothing else in the way of commerce. At least one other proposed development had already fallen through. Even so, Vidler offered to help Gately secure water. It applied to the New Mexico state government for permission to pump 700 acre-feet of water from the area aquifer, spending almost $6 million during the application process.

But Vidlerโ€™s own models showed that water use from the new development would cause water levels in the aquifer to drop, endangering residential wells. โ€œPeople are already having problems with water, and thatโ€™s well-known here,โ€ said Joanne Hilton, a hydrologist who lives in the area around the proposed development site and relies on a household well.

By 2017, residents had taken Vidler to court in an attempt to stop the project. Several key executives had to take the stand, including Timian-Palmer and her longtime right-hand man, executive vice president Steve Hartman. During a series of testy depositions, it emerged that Vidler seemed to be stretching the truth about the โ€œbeneficial useโ€ it planned for the water. The company claimed that Gately was the mastermind behind the development, but the Montana holding company he was using for the project had been dissolved and no one from Vidler seemed sure about where he was based. 

During one deposition, the lawyer for the area residents asked Hartman if he could provide specifics about how Vidler wanted to use the water. Just what kind of development was Gately trying to build, and how much water would it need? Hartman struggled to answer.

โ€œSo assuming that you get the permit and the case becomes final, then at that point you and Mr. Gately are going to sit down and talk about whatโ€™s next, is that right?โ€ the lawyer asked.

โ€œYes,โ€ Hartman said.

โ€œAnd at this point you have no idea what that is?โ€ the lawyer asked.

โ€œI do not,โ€ Hartman replied.

Two years later, the court tossed out Vidlerโ€™s application, ruling that the project would have risked taking water away from area residents and would conflict with New Mexicoโ€™s statewide goals for water conservation.

Faced with obstacles like these, Vidler had to go on offense. The company donated more than $275,000 to Nevada political candidates between 2008 and 2022, increasing its annual contributions in the years that followed the Great Recession. Hartman became a fixture in the Nevada legislature, lobbying on dozens of water bills, many of them concerned with obscure points of water law. During the present legislative session, as the company prepares to defend its water interests in Lincoln County, it has hired Nevadaโ€™s premier lobbying firm, whose other clients include Amazon and Uber.

In recent years, Timian-Palmer and Hartman have tried to scrape value from Vidlerโ€™s water assets wherever they can. They sold off some of their banked Arizona water to a golf course in a Phoenix suburb, making a more than threefold profit. They returned to Sandy Valley in 2016 to apply for water on a different patch of land, only to run into trouble once again with Marquis, who discovered that the company hadnโ€™t told an area landowner it was going to apply for the water under his land. In litigation over the Coyote Springs development in Lincoln County, they conducted geological testing to prove that they should be able to tap an aquifer the state had deemed too vulnerable, alleging the existence of an underground fault they named โ€œDorothyโ€™s Fault,โ€ apparently after Timian-Palmer. They even went so far as to demand that Nevada cut off water deliveries to a town near a basin where Vidler had been prevented from pumping water, arguing that the town shouldnโ€™t get to use water, either.

โ€œTheyโ€™re engaging in these processes for one reason and one reason only, and thatโ€™s to one day make money,โ€ said Roerink, the water conservation advocate.

Neither Vidler nor D.R. Horton responded to extensive requests for comment on this story. Dorothy Timian-Palmer initially agreed to an interview in response to a request from Grist, but a Horton spokesperson later said that the company wouldnโ€™t be participating in the story. After Grist visited Vidlerโ€™s office in Carson City, a Horton spokesperson offered to respond to a list of questions, but company representatives failed to do so before publication.

Even as Vidler sought buyers for its water rights, PICO went through a shakeup: Shareholders grew dissatisfied with Hartโ€™s high salary and with the slow return on their investments. They ousted Hart and replaced him with a new chairman who soon cut costs, selling off PICO subsidiaries. Vidlerโ€™s assets were more difficult to cash out: The company had spent tens of millions of dollars on water projects like the ones near Reno and Albuquerque, and it wasnโ€™t clear when those projects would start making money. The easiest way to make the companyโ€™s shareholders whole was for another company to buy Vidler outright. 

Timian-Palmer and her fellow executives started trying to find a buyer as early as 2017, when they hired a bank to solicit potential offers, according to a corporate filing. The bank contacted more than 150 different potential buyers, but none of them showed much interest. The main problem was that nobody seemed to be interested in acquiring Vidler wholesale. As the search continued, it became clear that Vidler needed a company that wanted to use its executivesโ€™ water expertise, not just sell off the assets Timian-Palmer had acquired โ€” in other words, a company that needed Vidler as much as Vidler needed it.

It took a few more years and a millennium-scale drought, but in the final months of 2021, Vidler found a company that could finally make its development dreams a reality.


D.R. Horton is a tight-lipped company, and it didnโ€™t say much about its purchase of Vidler. In a press release published on the day of the acquisition, the company noted that โ€œVidler owns a portfolio of premium water rights and other water-related assets โ€ฆ in markets where D.R. Horton operates.โ€ A few weeks later, when a stock analyst asked about the purchase on an earnings call, an executive replied that โ€œwe put out pretty much what weโ€™re going to say about Vidler in the press release.โ€ 

Even so, the logic of the transaction was apparent: The places where Vidler owned substantial water rights were also places where Horton was building homes. At a shareholder meeting in 2021, Timian-Palmer told investors that Horton was โ€œmoving like gangbustersโ€ in the north suburbs of Reno, planning multiple subdivisions that could purchase water from Vidlerโ€™s long-dormant Fish Springs Ranch pipeline. The valleys north of Reno are now home to a horde of uniform subdivisions, most of them sandwiched against each other just off the freeway. Many of the largest belong to Horton. If the cityโ€™s recent growth spurt continues, Vidlerโ€™s pipeline will be the only available water source for future builders.

Horton is also building several developments east of Carson City on a fast-growing industrial corridor near a Tesla factory. In a 2021 financial statement, Vidler noted that โ€œthere are currently few existing sustainable water sources to support future growth and developmentโ€ in that corridor, except for Vidlerโ€™s own supplies. Horton also has numerous active projects in central Arizona, where Vidler has banked almost 300,000 acre-feet of water undergroundTogether, the two companies have everything they need to capitalize on the Westโ€™s post-pandemic population boom.

Vidler has always operated more like a fixer than a financial trader, not just flipping assets but developing new water resources in the driest areas. Several sources who spoke to Grist theorized that this was why Horton paid so much to acquire the company.

โ€œIf youโ€™re a homebuilder, your best option is to do what Horton has done โ€” go out and find more supply,โ€ said Grady Gammage, a real estate lawyer who has represented Greenstone, another water broker founded by a former Vidler employee, and several homebuilders. โ€œWhat Horton is likely thinking is that youโ€™re faced either with doing a deal [to get new water], or trying to build that expertise in-house.โ€ 

The future of the West depends on whether, and to what extent, these companies can secure these deals and expertise in the face of new regulatory restrictions and supply constraints.

Nowhere is this dynamic clearer than in the western suburbs of Phoenix, where developers and builders have thrown up tens of thousands of homes that rely on groundwater from fragile aquifers. Earlier this year, Arizonaโ€™s new governor released a study that showed the area has much less water available than was previously thought. State law requires developers to show that proposed homes have a hundred-year water supply, and officials have now decreed that there isnโ€™t enough groundwater in the area to provide for any more new subdivisions in the southern and western outskirts of the city. 

This has left several gigantic development projects stuck in limbo, including ones with which Horton was involved. It has also forced developers and homebuilders to look for alternate sources of water, including from underground storage facilities like Vidlerโ€™s. The companyโ€™s biggest underground aquifer contains enough water to supply about 2,000 homes for a hundred years each.

โ€œItโ€™s a challenge to find other supplies right now, to say the least,โ€ said Spencer Kamps, vice president of legislative affairs at the Central Arizona Home Builders Association, which advocates for builders and real estate. โ€œA number of investments have been made out in the area under the assumption that there was water available for growth.โ€ But many people in the industry now worry that those assumptions were mistaken.

You wouldnโ€™t know it from visiting the area. Earlier this year, I presented myself as a potential home buyer in the Phoenix suburbs where the state has identified a groundwater shortage, touring several Horton developments. These developments are tight clusters of cookie-cutter homes, surrounded for the most part by empty desert or isolated alfalfa fields. Construction appears to happen rapidly: As I drove through the developments, I found myself slipping back and forth between streets full of finished homes with xeriscaped lawns and streets where construction crews were still hammering at open timber frames.

In speaking with Horton sales representatives on my tours, I asked about water access, saying Iโ€™d heard there were issues in the area. The representatives brushed off my concerns, saying they โ€œtry to stay out of politics,โ€ or that they โ€œdonโ€™t believe they would allow growth out hereโ€ if there wasnโ€™t enough water.

That is far from certain. Timian-Palmer and her colleagues have spent decades finding water sources for suburban developments like these. While the homes they helped build will last for many decades, the water that supplies them may not. Without ample rain to replenish them, the small and fragile aquifers that Vidler has tapped could someday empty out, leaving future homeowners high and dry. This has already started to happen in rural parts of the West where agriculture is dominant, and it may ultimately happen to the suburban developments Vidler is now helping to build.

Mike Machado, a former California state senator who served on PICOโ€™s board of directors between 2013 and 2017, said the companyโ€™s business model makes him worried for the future of those developments.

โ€œThe biggest challenge for Vidler is whether or not the resources they have are renewable,โ€ he told Grist. โ€œItโ€™s great to be able to have these resources, but if all youโ€™re doing is mining them, at some point in time, youโ€™re not going to have them. So that is creating a false sense of security for those that are relying on the resource.โ€

Hortonโ€™s sales representatives in Arizona have no such misgivings. For the moment, at least, the building boom is very much alive.

โ€œIf we continue to grow out here, the people living here will have water,โ€ one sales representative told me. โ€œWhat, are we just not gonna have water when we turn our faucet on?โ€

Phase out oil and gas leasing in #Colorado? — @BigPivots #ActOnClimate #KeepItInTheGround

Pump jack and noise barrier. Photo credit: Allen Best/Big Pivots

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

Colorado 350 has set out to ask Colorado voters in 2024 to phase out new oil and gas leasing before 2031. Why so soon?

350 Colorado and associated groups coalesced as Safe & Health Colorado have launched an effort that members hope will result in a ballot proposal in the 2024 general election.

If successful, this ballot initiative would end new oil and gas permits issued on lands governed by state government before the end of 2030.

Micah Parkin

In an interview with Big Pivots, Micah Parkin, the executive director of 350 Colorado, said her group has been buoyed by polling that shows Coloradans are โ€œvery concerned about the impacts of the climate crisis that we see in our state.โ€ Too, she added, โ€œwe feel this plan aligns with what scientists around the world are calling for, to phase out fossil fuels and move toward renewable energy.โ€

In 2021, Colorado was responsible for 3.7% of crude oil extraction in the United States, fifth among states. Texas was first at 42.4% and New Mexico second at 11.1%.

This is from Big Pivots 73 (April 27, 2023). Please consider subscribingโ€”or, just maybe a donation?

Colorado ranked seventh in natural gas production. It is responsible for 4.9% of the nationโ€™s production.

โ€œWe really need to be dealing with our contribution to the climate crisis,โ€ she said.

An additional impetus is more localized. Oil and gas drilling has a substantial contribution in creating high ozone levels during summer months.

Organizers have created two, overlapping draft proposals, unsure which one they will eventually seek to put before voters. They will use polling to evaluate which one is most likely to be approved.

One measure would specifically target oil and gas operations that use hydrofracturing technology, i.e. โ€œfracking,โ€ and the other more broadly all oil and gas drilling.

Both proposals have been submitted to the Legislative Council as required by state law. The state agency is required by law to โ€œreview and commentโ€ on initiative petitions, basically to ward off confusions and make sure the proposals conform to state law.

In their first draft, the proponents said they wanted to phase out and discontinue the issuance of new oil and gas operation permits by the stateโ€™s Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission by Dec. 31, 2030. The Legislative Council asked whether those permits would be effective beyond this deadline or would there be expiration dates?

The reviewers at the Colorado Capitol also suggested using โ€œgases,โ€ the more familiar spelling, instead of โ€œgasses.โ€

And then the law requires a single title for the bill? What would that title be?

The Legislative Council also recommended addressing the loss of severance taxes on oil and gas extracted, as those severance taxes are used to fund a wide variety of programs in Colorado, half to water projects and other natural resource management programs, and the other half to local governments.

In fiscal year 2018-2019, before covid slowed drilling, the tax yielded almost $236 million, according to the Legislative Council.

The draft language also calls for a โ€œstate program to explore transition strategies for oil and gas workers.โ€

Legislative council reviewers responded: โ€œIs the new program intended to merely โ€˜identifyโ€™ funding sources for workers and communities to access on their own OR is the program intended to provide funding to assist workers and communities?โ€

Ballots for the November 2024 election wonโ€™t go out until October 2024, still more than 17 months away. Why the effort now?

Parkin points to the necessary legwork, including signatures for petitions for the measure, whatever is finally chosen, to go on the ballot. โ€œIt will be more affordable and there will be less competition with other campaigns.โ€

Why not seek a legislative remedy instead of going directly to voters?

โ€œWe actually have been proposing it as legislation, and there was a legislator willing to cover it, but was unable to get leadership approval to move a bill forward. It was a bill just to study the phase-out, what it would be like. And our governor (Jared Polis) really has not shown much interest in reining in the oil and gas industry. The Colorado Oil and Gas Commission has permitted more than 5,000 wells since he has been in office (starting in January 2019), about 1,000 a year. He really has shown no interest. We have talked with different staff members and have gotten no interest, even though (the oil and gas sector) is a massive source of greenhouse gases and runs in opposition to our emission goals and our air quality goals.โ€

Downsides? โ€œIt takes a lot of effort, itโ€™s expensive, and it takes a lot of fundraising. Unfortunately we donโ€™t have the money of the fossil fuel industry.โ€

Allen Best is a Colorado-based journalist who publishes an e-magazine called Big Pivots. Reach him atย allen.best@comcast.netย or 720.415.9308.

2023 #COleg: #Colorado lawmakers โ€œbelly flopโ€ on #water crisis, opting for further study of #ColoradoRiver over action, experts say — The #Denver Post #COriver #aridification

West Drought Monitor map April 25, 2023.

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

Coloradoโ€™s legislative leadership promised this year that the stateโ€™s water problems would be the โ€œcenterpieceโ€ of conservation efforts but their keystone proposal focused on the Colorado River and widespread drought plaguing the West is to study the issue further. At such a late stage in the drying American West, water experts tell The Denver Post that creating another study group amounts to procrastination while time is running out. And, they say, itโ€™s unlikely that evaluating the drought โ€“ย exacerbated and made permanentย by climate change โ€“ yet again will yield any new ideas.

Lawmakers introduced the bipartisan bill,ย SB23-295, late in their session. It is on its way to clearing the Senate and heading to the House of Representatives. Behind the measure are Western Slope Sens. Dylan Roberts, an Avon Democrat, and Perry Will, a New Castle Republican, Speaker of the House Julie McCluskie, and Marc Catlin, a Montrose Republican. The bill would create a 16-member task force, plus an advisory member, consisting of a cross-section of water users including representatives of the Department of Natural Resources, the Colorado Agriculture Commission, members of the Ute Mountain Ute and Southern Ute tribes, water commissions and environmental organizations.

On a day in late May [2022] when wildfire smoke obscured the throat of an ancient volcano called Shiprock in the distance, I visited the Ute Mountain Ute farming and ranching operation in the southwestern corner of Colorado. Photo credit: Allen Best/Big Pivots

Officials in Colorado could be doing far more, though, than convening another task force, Dan Beard, a former U.S. Bureau of Reclamation commissioner, said. He lambasted the proposal.

โ€œIt isnโ€™t a flop, itโ€™s a belly flop,โ€ Beard said.

Once formed, the task force would begin meeting by July and by December recommend ways Colorado could counter drought in the Colorado River Basin and related inter-state commitments. The group would have broad leeway for the types of recommendations it could offer…While Colorado isnโ€™t the biggest water user in the Colorado River Basin, it could still contribute meaningful water savings, [Dan] Beard said. For example, lawmakers could work to curb the amount of water piped out of the basin, Beard said. Major urban centers along the Front Range (like Denver) draw water from the river and move it across the Continental Divide to their taps. Farmers and Ranchers east of the divide also rely on Colorado River water. Trans-basin water transfers like those are problematic because all the water taken out of the basin is lost to the Colorado River forever. On the contrary, water used within the basin to irrigate crops will ultimately flow back into the river if itโ€™s not absorbed by the plants.

Colorado transmountain diversions via the State Engineer’s office

#YampaRiver anticipated to reach its highest level yet Thursday into Friday — Steamboat Pilot & Today

Click the link to read the article on the Steamboat Pilot & Today website (Kit Geary). Here’s an excerpt:

Routt County Emergency Management is warning residents to expect flooding Thursday, May 4, into Friday, May 5, with the Yampa River anticipated to reach its highest level yet this season. Emergency Operations Manager David โ€œMoโ€ย DeMorat told Routt County commissioners on Monday, May 1, that the river had hit 6,500 cubic feet per second, and warm temperatures are expected to continue through the week, which could cause the river to reach 7,000 cfs by Friday. DeMorat said this amount of water for the Yampa River is considered โ€œaction levelโ€ flooding by the National Weather Service. Action levels generally require municipalities to keep a closer eye on flooding and have potential mitigation plans and flood warnings in place…

To gauge what flooding will look like, the county uses snow-water equivalent gauges that provide estimates for the amount of snowmelt that could occur three to four weeks out. This looks at the amount of snow on the ground, but cannot predict at what rate it will melt. Because of this, no exact estimates can be given, as it is ultimately the weather and the freeze-and-thaw cycle that will determine at what rate the snow melts.

DeMorat explained to commissioners that these gauges show areas north of Steamboat and the Stagecoach Reservoir currently have the highest potential for flooding. Three snow-water equivalent gauges stationed north of Steamboat have helped emergency management identify these regions as problem areas for flooding due to the snowpack that could melt. All three are north of Steamboat with one near Dry Lake, one near Lost Dog Creek and another slightly farther northwest. DeMorat noted these locations range from 165-185% of the average snowpack. He told commissioners that Stagecoach Reservoir is another area of concern with 140% of its average snowpack.

Alongside the problem areas DeMorat named, the National Weather Service issued a flood warning for Elkhead Creek, particularly where the creek meets the Yampa River. This flood warning began on Monday and will end Friday unless communicated otherwise by the National Weather Service.

New green infrastructure planning open-source tool available — NOAA

Street-side swale and adjacent pervious concrete sidewalk in Seattle, US. Stormwater is infiltrated through these features into soil, thereby reducing levels of urban runoff to city storm sewers. By U.S. Environmental Protection Agency – U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C. “Managing Wet Weather with Green Infrastructure:Municipal Handbook:Green Streets” Document No. EPA-833-F-08-009, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=5921077

Click the link to read the article on the NOAA website:

The Mid-Atlantic Regional Integrated Sciences and Assessments (MARISA), a NOAA CAP/RISA team, principal investigators Jordan Fischbach, Debra Knopman, and Klaus Keller published a new tool to mainstream green infrastructure planning in the publication, โ€œRhodium-SWMM: An open-source tool for green infrastructure placement under deep uncertainty.โ€ Green infrastructure measures are stormwater management practices that mimic natural hydrological processes that are used to mitigate negative impacts of urban development and climate change adaptation. While these practices are increasingly being used, there is a challenge to evaluate their effectiveness due to some deep uncertainties and require navigating tradeoffs between multiple objectives. Advanced decision-making tools and methods such as Robust Decision Making (RDM) and Many-Objective Robust Decision Making (MORDM) have been applied to green infrastructure sparingly, but there has still been a lack of open-source tools to support decision-makers.

The MARISA investigators have developed Rhodium-SWMM that connect two open source tools: the Stormwater Management Model (SWMM) and Rhodium, a Python library for MORDM. This new open-source Python library provides an interface for taking SWMM files and applying them to a wide range of parameters identified as uncertainties or levers. . It helps to efficiently search and sample GI decision alternatives and identify vulnerabilities in the system for better multifunctional solutions to future changes.

Access the publication ยป

Learn more about MARISA ยป

For more information contact Jessica Garrison

The topsoil moisture percent short to very short was highest in #Nebraska at 78% and #NewMexico at 72% — @DroughtDenise

Topsoil in the SVS category climbed by 15% in Missouri and California, but fell by 36% and 19% in Oklahoma and Colorado after recent precipitation.

Debris and mud covers roads, trails, train tracks in #GlenwoodSprings — The Summit Daily #runoff

Click the link to read the article on The Summit Daily website (Cassandra Ballard). Here’s an excerpt:

After a quick weather jump from cold to warm over the past week, there have now been multiple areas of mud and debris flow throughout Glenwood Springs and the surrounding area due to the rapidly melting snow on Red Mountain and elsewhere. On Tuesday morning, a major debris flow blocked access to the wastewater treatment facility in West Glenwood, along with covering the Union Pacific Railroad train tracks in West Glenwood, causing a freight train to get stuck…

On Monday, local trails on Red Mountain and at Wulsohn Mountain Park, and on the higher trails of the South Canyon trail system were closed from mud flows, and the city was urging people to stay off the closed trails…

In addition, Garfield County emergency management officials reported late Monday that County Road 127 (3 Mile Road) was covered with water and mud and a private bridge was washed out at the half mile mark due to flooding on Three Mile Creek. Several residences were also being impacted. And, the Colorado Department of Transportation was reporting mudflow activity in Glenwood Canyon near Interstate 70.

Follow the Living River journey and take action by May 30! — @AudubonRockies

From email from Audubon Rockies (Abby Burk):

Hi all, and thank you for joining Audubon Rockies and conservation photographer Dave Showalter for his multimedia journey through the living Colorado River! In his new book, Living River: The Promise of the Mighty Colorado, Dave shares the beauty of the watershed and a story of resiliency and resolution to continue the work for healthy watersheds. You can watch last weekโ€™s virtual book launch event recording here.

The Colorado River existing management guidelines are set to expire in 2026. The states that draw water from it are about to undertake a new round of negotiations over the riverโ€™s future. The use of the river will be renegotiated amid climate change, reduced snowpack, and water shortages, presenting an opportunity to ensure universal access to clean water for more than 30 federally-recognized Native tribes and make the allocation of the Colorado equitable as well as sustainable.

This May is a critical time to be a voice for the river, as the United States Bureau of Reclamation seeks public comment on the Draft Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement (SEIS) to the 2007 Interim Guidelines. This SEIS evaluates different scenarios to better balance water supply in the Colorado River watershed, which will impact ecosystem health in the Grand Canyon and other areas.

The stories, art, and lifeways that deepen our relationships to water are what build the collective voice for healthy rivers that benefit wildlife and people. The Mighty Colorado changes everything it touches, including us. Here are a few ways you can join the Living River conversation:

  • Buy a copy ofย Living Riverย fromย Mountaineers Books, your local bookstore, or one of theseย online sellers.
    • *Audubon members, as a special thank you, get a 20% discount by using the code “LIVINGRIVERLOVE” at checkout from Mountaineers Books.
  • Attend another book launch event or encourage a friend to attend one. The Living River book tour is traveling the West and has both in-person and virtual events.
  • Explore the Living River website and follow the journey on Instagram.
  • Take action by May 30 and urge the Bureau of Reclamation to recognize the important links between human health, stable communities, and the environment and also implement measures that better balance water supply and protect the Grand Canyon ecosystem.

We also encourage you to sign up for Audubonโ€™s Western Water Action Network to stay up to date on Colorado River information and engagement.

Presently, there is less water in the Colorado River system than at any time in recorded history, threatening the vitality of its ecosystem. But wherever there is water, there is abundant, dynamic life. As Dave Showalter says: โ€œThe river is not dying. She flows with the same pure purpose as before we arrived.”

Thereโ€™s no giving up on the Colorado for riverkeepers engaged in riparian restoration. The hard work ahead requires widespread engagement in our future, which begins with all of us asking: Where does our water come from, and who does it connect us to?

All my best and hope to see you downstream,

Abby

Updated Colorado River 4-Panel plot thru Water Year 2022 showing reservoirs, flows, temperatures and precipitation. All trends are in the wrong direction. Since original 2017 plot, conditions have deteriorated significantly. Brad Udall via Twitter: https://twitter.com/bradudall/status/1593316262041436160

Data dashboard: #RoaringForkRiver #CrystalRiver #MaroonCreek #runoff — @AspenJournalism

Click the link to read the article on the Aspen Journalism website (Laurine Lassalle):

Streamflows down from last week

Streamflows in the Roaring Fork basin are down from last week.

Aspen Journalism is now compiling real time streamflow data. At Stillwater, located upstream of Aspen, the Fork ran at 39.7 cfs on April 24 at 1:30 pm. In terms of trends, the Fork ran at 40.1 cfs or 65.7% of average on April 23 after reaching 65.6 cfs on April 19. Thatโ€™s down from 55.2 cfs and 117.4% of average, on April 16.

You can find all the featured stations from the dashboard with their real-time streamflow on thisย webpage.

Credit: Laurine Lassalle/Aspen Journalism

The USGS sensor on the Roaring Fork river below Maroon Creek recorded the Fork running at 138 cfs on April 23, or 98.6% of average. Thatโ€™s down from 164 cfs on April 16.

At Emma, below the confluence with the dam-controlled Fryingpan, the April 23 streamflow of 364 cfs represented about 78.3% of average. Thatโ€™s down from 412 cfs, and 101.7% of average, on April 16.

The transbasin diversion that sends Roaring Fork basin headwaters to Front Range cities was flowing at 13.7 cfs on April 23, up from 5.9 cfs on April 16.

Meanwhile, theย Crystal Riverย above Avalanche Creek, which is not impacted by dams or transbasin diversions, flowed at 195 cfs, or 70.1% of average, on April 23. Last week, the river ran at 244 cfs, or 123.9% of average.

April 1 Brings Start of 2023 Canal Deliveries of Colorado-Big Thompson Project #Water — @Northern_Water #ColoradoRiver #SouthPlatteRiver

Click the link to read the article on the Northern Water website:

How many people does it take to get the Colorado-Big Thompson Project ready for the peak delivery season? For the Northern Water Operations Division, the answer is โ€ฆ just about everyone.

Crews have been working throughout the winter to maintain the 80-year-old infrastructure and make the necessary repairs. Sometimes just decades of freeze-thaw action will create the need for repairs and replacements.

Why work so hard in the winter? Because water users expect consistent and reliable deliveries throughout the spring, summer and fall, meaning there isnโ€™t room on the schedule to make repairs during warm, long days.

Map of the Colorado-Big Thompson Project via Northern Water

WaterSHED Summit 2023 June 22, 2023

Watershed Summit returns!
Thursday, June 22, at Denver Botanic Gardens
REGISTER
Thursday, June 22, 2023

1 to 5 pm โ€“ Watershed Summit
featuring panels, presentations, and discussions

5 pm โ€“ Happy hour
featuring Stem Ciders, Howdyย Beer, and plenty of food

Tickets: $60 โ€“ย Register here


Registration includes access to the Watershed Summit, happy hour, refreshments, and entrance to Denver Botanic Gardens on June 22, 2023.This year, we’re excited to offer add-on optional experiences for those looking for somethingย special before the main event:Guided tour of water-wise gardens by Denver Botanic Gardens horticulturists: $10 (75 spots available)Eat within your watershed: Locally sourced lunch prepared byย SAME Cafรฉ: $20 (25 spots available)The Watershed Summit, or โ€œShedโ€ as it is affectionately known, has become a Colorado tradition, gathering a range of stakeholders to discuss current and future water challenges and opportunities facing the state. This yearโ€™s event will convene diverse voices and creative points of view toย explore waterย efficient landscaping, how youth environmental education is bridging geographical divides, federal involvement in western water issues, and so much more!ย 

Shed โ€™23ย returns to a fully in-person event at Denver Botanic Gardens, concluding with the ever-popular happy hour event sponsored by Stem Ciders and Howdyย Beer.

This event is produced through a collaborative partnership between the One World One Water Center (a joint initiative of Metropolitan State University of Denver and Denver Botanic Gardens), Aurora Water, the Colorado Water Conservation Board, Denver Water and Resource Central.
We hope you’ll join us this summer for the return of the Watershed Summit!

#Rico Reprieve + BLM revokes Moab-area lithium permit — @Land_Desk #DoloresRiver

Rico, Colorado, during its heyday in 1891. William Henry Jackson photo, Denver Public Library Special Collections.

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

CONTEXT: Iโ€™ve long been intrigued by Rico, a former mining town of about 300 people in  the western San Juan Mountains in southwestern Colorado. On paper, Rico looks a lot like Silverton: It was platted in the 1870s on Ute land as a mining hub and flourished during its early years; it sits at about 9,000 feet in elevation, surrounded by high mountains; and it was serviced by a railroad built by Otto Mears.

Yet Rico, just 20 miles as the crow flies from Silverton, ultimately followed a far different trajectory. The 1893 Silver Panic hit both towns hard initially, but Silverton ultimately recovered and its mining industry continued to support a fairly healthy population until the early 1990s. Rico, not so much โ€” the population in 1890 was about 4,000; by 1900 it had shrunk to 811 and continued to ebb, bottoming out at just 75 in 1980. 

Prior to mining, snowmelt and rain seep into natural cracks and fractures, eventually emerging as a freshwater spring (usually). Graphic credit: Jonathan Thompson

Mining in Rico didnโ€™t collapse after the Silver Panic by any means. Throughout the decades, big and little firms gouged and tunneled, drilled and blasted, stoped and mucked, milled and smelted in the Rico Mountains. Sulfide-bearing iron pyrite โ€” the active ingredient in acid mine drainage โ€” is abundant here. So much so that in the 1950s the Rico-Argentine Mining Company and Vanadium Corporation of America began mining pyrite to produce sulphuric acid at a plant at the St. Louis Tunnel. The acid was used mainly for uranium processing at mills in surrounding lowlands. In 1980 Anaconda, a subsidiary of Atlantic Richfield, bought the Rico Argentine Mine site and surrounding lands with an eye toward molybdenum mining, but never actually pulled any ore out of the ground.

All of the mining activity permanently scarred the land, sullied the waters of the Dolores River, which passes through town, and contaminated town soils with lead. But it was never enough to revive the townโ€™s early glory or population. Rico lost the Dolores County seat to the powerful Dove Creek pinto bean and Grange lobby in the 1940s, and the Rio Grande Southern railroad abandoned the community shortly thereafter. 

Silverton, meanwhile, held onto its branch of the Denver & Rio Grande Western railroad, helping that town to become the backdrop of many a mid-century western film and a major tourist attraction. And the relatively prosperous mining industry there had left behind infrastructure to support the new economy. Despite its scenic location, mining history, and proximity to public lands, Rico never developed a strong tourist economy โ€” perhaps by design. In 1990 Silvertonโ€™s population was about 800; Ricoโ€™s was roughly one-eighth of that. But what Rico lacked in economic development it made up for with a rough and rustic sort of charm. 

Over the years, various entities have hatched economic development schemes. In the 1980s, the Rico Development Corporation bought most of the Anoconda/Atlantic Richfield land and other property, compiling 1,800 acres of patented mining claims and hundreds of in-town lots (and in so doing took on responsibility for water treatment at the old Rico-Argentine mine site, which didnโ€™t end so well). Real estate developer Rico Renaissance acquired the land in the mid-1990s and worked with Rico officials to come up with a grand plan to revive, spiff-up, and build out the infrastructure needed to substantially grow the old mining town. Meanwhile, economic exiles from Telluride โ€” 26 miles and one mountain pass away โ€” began moving in and opening a few businesses, including a live music venue that attracted folks from around the region. 

Rico Renaissanceโ€™s plans fell apart in 2007 for various reasons, and they tried to sell the land to Bolero Mining, which wanted to build a molybdenum mine nearby, to the dismay of some and delight of other locals. The effort failed, in part because the global financial crisis diminished demand for minerals, in part because opening a new mine in this day and age ainโ€™t easy. As if to drive home the point, in 2011 the Environmental Protection Agency ordered Atlantic Richfield Company (ARCO) to clean up the Rico-Argentine Mine site just north of town; it had been oozing high concentrations of zinc and other heavy metals into the Dolores River since the mid-1990s. The company has spent at least $63 million on the effort so far, even though it never made any money off of the property. 

What was left of Rico Renaissance became Disposition Properties, which continued to toy with developing the properties, but never progressed very far. Meanwhile Ricoโ€™s population has continued to grow, albeit slowly, and real estate prices have climbed. There are no homes in Rico listed for sale on Zillow, just a couple of lots priced around $200,000. But a 12-bedroom log-cabin monstrosity a handful of miles downriver from town is priced at $2.95 million. Still, the place isnโ€™t what Iโ€™d call gentrified in any pervasive way; it retains its small-town funkiness. I passed through there last Fourth of July and was delighted to see the aftermath of a down-home parade and just dozens of folks milling about the sidewalks eating burgers (as opposed to the thousands that mob Silverton on the Fourth).

Map via The Land Desk.

Last April, Disposition finally threw in the towel and put 181 parcels covering 1,146 acres on the market for $10 million. Telluride Properties, the listing agent, marketed the property โ€” and its potential โ€” aggressively. It touted its geothermal properties (hot springs resort), the space for 300 new homes, potential for a land swap with the Forest Service, a parcel for a riverside lodge, and so on. It even suggested the possibility of building a chairlift, perhaps to access a Silverton Mountain-esque backcountry ski area. It did not mention the Superfund site or lead contamination; lack of infrastructure; floodplains and other geologic hazards; or Ricoโ€™s 2004 master plan objective of avoiding a โ€œpredominant resort character.โ€

Many locals were not amused. A resort and hundreds of new homes would certainly bring jobs and money to the area, but it would also completely overwhelm the existing community and smother its scrappy spirit. Rico townsfolk only needed to look around the region to see that amenity-economy-based prosperity has its downsides, ranging from housing crises to the widening abyss between the ultra-wealthy and everyone else. 

Rico still may get gentrified, but the threat of it becoming a glitzy destination resort appears to have subsided. On April 5, the Dolores County clerk recorded a real property transfer and a special warranty deed conveying dozens of Disposition Propertiesโ€™ parcels to Atlantic Richfield. While the property transfer document remains under wraps โ€” itโ€™s labeled a โ€œsensitive documentโ€ โ€” the warranty deed includes a list of what appears to be all of Dispositionโ€™s remaining properties. The transfer fee is listed as $778.94, indicating that the sale price was about $7.79 million. 

We werenโ€™t able to get in touch with anyone at Atlantic Richfield โ€” now the valleyโ€™s largest landowner โ€” about the purchase or their intentions. We can rest assured, however, that they arenโ€™t going to be building a Rico Mountain mega-resort. Rico Town Manager Chauncey McCarthy said the mining company likely will hold onto contaminated and mining-impacted claims in order to remediate and reclaim them (which is probably why they bought the property in the first place). They may sell off other parcels and have expressed an interest in working with the town to make use of the in-town properties. The Montezuma Land Conservancy reportedly wanted to buy the property and put conservation easements on some parcels while possibly building affordable housing on others. Those kinds of scenarios seem far more likely now. 

Rico, undoubtedly, will continue to grow. But what that growth looks like and how fast it will occur seems now to be far more within the control of the community and its residents.

Dolores River watershed

Mining Monitor

NEWS: In April, the Bureau of Land Management withdrew its permit for A1 Lithium Incorporatedโ€™s Paradox Lithium exploratory drilling project near Dead Horse Point State Park outside of Moab. 

CONTEXT: The Nevada firm and its many associated companies (Blackstone, Anson, etc) has been staking claims like crazy in the region, as reported by the Land Desk over the last six months or so, and has big plans to extract and mechanically process lithium. Last September, the Moab BLM office approved A1โ€™s proposal to drill two exploratory wells (actually, to reopen abandoned oil and gas wells for exploratory purposes) near the road to Dead Horse Point State Park and Canyonlands National Parkโ€™s Island in the Sky unit. Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance appealed the decision. 

The Utah BLMโ€™s acting state director Anita Bilbao decided to set aside the permit. Bilboa ordered the Moab Field Office to re-open its analysis to โ€œaddress SUWAโ€™s concerns regarding a reasonable range of alternatives and to complete additional analysis regarding the cumulative impacts to water quantity.โ€ 

A1/Anson also has the Green River Project in the worksย north of the aforementioned wells. In March, the company announced it hadย filed a notice of intentย with the BLM to drill three exploratory wells there.

Prior to 1921 this section of the Colorado River at Dead Horse Point near Moab, Utah was known as the Grand River. Mike Nielsen – Dead Horse Point State Park

CO2 levels Week of 23 April 2023:ย ย 424.40 parts per million — World Meteorological Organization @WMO

Mauna Loa is WMO Global Atmosphere Watch benchmark station and monitors rising CO2 levels Week of 23 April 2023: 424.40 parts per million Weekly value one year ago: 420.19 ppm Weekly value 10 years ago: 399.32 ppm ๐Ÿ“ท http://CO2.Earthhttps://co2.earth/daily-co2. Credit: World Meteorological Organization

Biden-Harris administration to replace Leadville Mine Drainage Tunnel Treatment Plant — Reclamtion #ArkansasRiver

The LMDT is west of Hwy. 91 north of Leadville. Forest, wetlands, and a small neighborhood are located nearby. Photo credit: Reclamation

Click the link to read the release on the Reclamation webiste (Anna Pereaย and Elizabeth Smithย ):

LOVELAND, Colo. โ€” The Bureau of Reclamation announces a $56 million investment from the Presidentโ€™s Investing in America agenda for the construction of a replacement Leadville Mine Drainage Tunnel Treatment Plant. Originally built in 1991, the plant removes heavy metals from contaminated water caused by mining operations in the Leadville area. It has since reached its service life, and this investment from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law will ensure the plant continues to protect water supply

The Department of the Interior recently announced a nearlyย $585 million investment from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Lawย for infrastructure repairs on water delivery systems. Funds will support 83 projects across all five Reclamation regions, including the Leadville Mine treatment plant.

Leadville Mine Drainage Tunnel outbuildings. Photo credit: Reclamation

Since 1991, the treatment plant has operated to remove lead, zinc, manganese, iron, and other heavy metals from contaminated water that flows from the 2-mile-long Leadville Mine Drainage Tunnel. The plant sends 650 million gallons per year of treated, clean water to the headwaters of the Arkansas River in accordance with Environmental Protection Agency guidelines.

โ€œThe replacement of the treatment plant represents one of the key priorities that the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law is intended to accomplish, protecting our water supplies for people and the natural environment,โ€ said Jeff Rieker, Eastern Colorado Area Office Manager. โ€œThis funding will allow us to replace aging infrastructure that is critical for continued protection of the water resources of the Arkansas River, benefitting both the river itself, as well as the people who rely on it for a wide range of activities and uses.โ€

At present, the treatment plant has surpassed its expected service life of roughly 30 years. Over the next several years, Reclamation will construct a new treatment plant that incorporates knowledge gained over the past three decades, focuses on safety and improves the plantโ€™s visual impact.

โ€œThe new plant will provide a longer service life and continue Reclamation’s commitment to community safety and producing clean water for the Arkansas River,โ€ saidย Plant Supervisor, Jenelle Stefanic. โ€œThere will also be more maneuverability within the floor plan and additional safety features such as fall protection and noise reduction technology.โ€

Prior to mining, snowmelt and rain seep into natural cracks and fractures, eventually emerging as a freshwater spring (usually). Graphic credit: Jonathan Thompson

R.I.P. Gordon Lightfoot: “There the morning rain don’t fall and the sun always shines”

Click the link to read the New York Times obituary. Here’s an excerpt:

His rich baritone and gift for melodies made him one of the most popular artists of the 1970s with songs like โ€œThe Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgeraldโ€ and โ€œIf You Could Read My Mind.โ€

Gordon Lightfoot, the Canadian folk singer whose rich, plaintive baritone and gift for melodic songwriting made him one of the most popular recording artists of the 1970s, died on Monday night in Toronto. He was 84…

Mr. Lightfoot, a fast-rising star in Canada in the early 1960s, broke through to international success when his friends and fellow Canadians Ian and Sylvia Tyson recorded two of his songs,ย โ€œEarly Morning Rainโ€ย andย โ€œFor Lovinโ€™ Me.โ€ When Peter, Paul and Mary came out withย their own versions, and Marty Robbins reached the top of the country charts with Mr. Lightfootโ€™sย โ€œRibbon of Darkness,โ€ย Mr. Lightfootโ€™s reputation soared. Overnight, he joined the ranks of songwriters like Bob Dylan, Phil Ochs and Tom Paxton, all of whom influenced his style…When folk music ebbed in popularity, overwhelmed by the British invasion, Mr. Lightfoot began writing ballads aimed at a broader audience. He scored one hit after another, beginning in 1970 with the heartfelt โ€œIf You Could Read My Mind,โ€ inspired by the breakup of his first marriage. In quick succession he recorded the hits โ€œSundown,โ€ย โ€œCarefree Highway,โ€ย โ€œRainy Day Peopleโ€ย andย โ€œThe Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald,โ€ย which he wrote after reading a Newsweek article about the sinking of an iron-ore carrier in Lake Superior in 1975, with the loss of all 29 crew members…

For Canadians, Mr. Lightfoot was a national hero, a homegrown star who stayed home even after achieving spectacular success in the United States and who catered to his Canadian fans with cross-country tours. His ballads on Canadian themes, likeย โ€œCanadian Railroad Trilogy,โ€ย pulsated with a love for the nationโ€™s rivers and forests, which he explored on ambitious canoe trips far into the hinterlands. His personal style, reticent and self-effacing โ€” he avoided interviews and flinched when confronted with praise โ€” also went down well. โ€œSometimes I wonder why Iโ€™m being called an icon, because I really donโ€™t think of myself that way,โ€ Mr. Lightfoot told The Globe and Mail in 2008. โ€œIโ€™m a professional musician, and I work with very professional people. Itโ€™s how we get through life.โ€

[…]

Gordon Meredith Lightfoot Jr. was born on Nov. 17, 1938, in Orillia, Ontario, where his father managed a dry-cleaning plant. As a boy, he sang in a church choir, performed on local radio shows and shined in singing competitions. โ€œMan, I did the whole bit: oratorio work, Kiwanis contests, operettas, barbershop quartets,โ€ he told Time magazine in 1968…Mr. Lightfoot, accompanying himself on an acoustic 12-string guitar, in a voice that often trembled with emotion, gave spare, direct accounts of his material. He sang of loneliness, troubled relationships, the itch to roam and the majesty of the Canadian landscape. He was, as the Canadian writer Jack Batten put it, โ€œjournalist, poet, historian, humorist, short-story teller and folksy recollector of bygone days.โ€

The latest “E-Waternews” newsletter is hot off the presses from @Northern_Water #snowpack #runoff

The sun sets over the Never Summer Range in the headwaters of the Colorado River in 2020. Photo credit: Northern Water

From email from Northern Water (click to subscribe):

Strong winter snowpack has water managers optimistic

A parade of snowstorms through the American West this winter has water managers across the region cautiously optimistic about the near-term water supply.

According to data from the Natural Resources Conservation Service, the Upper Colorado River watershed is at about 113 percent of its annual average for precipitation. Further downstream in the Colorado River Basin, other tributaries such as the Gunnison River and San Juan River are showing even larger snowpack totals compared to historic averages. For communities throughout the basin, that is great news.

The above-average snowpack in the Upper Colorado River Basin means there is a strong chance that the Colorado-Big Thompson (C-BT) Project reservoirs will fill this summer, too. Thatโ€™s good news for residents of Northern Colorado who depend on the supplemental water supply that it delivers, but itโ€™s not as good for Windy Gap Project participants. They have an agreement with the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation that allows them to use available capacity in Lake Granby to store Windy Gap water for future delivery, but if Lake Granby is full of C-BT Project water, no storage capacity is available for Windy Gap water.

With the construction of Chimney Hollow Reservoir, Windy Gap Firming Project participants will have the opportunity to capture and store water for multiple-year deliveries with greater frequency and flexibility in years when Lake Granby would otherwise be full of C-BT Project water. The construction of reservoirs helps moderate the ups and downs of annual precipitation and has enabled Coloradoโ€™s population and food production systems to grow and prosper for more than a century.

Map of the Colorado-Big Thompson Project via Northern Water

The majority of the #wheat in the #Texas Panhandle will not be harvested as it simply cannot recover — @DroughtDenise #drought

South Drought Monitor map. April 28, 2023.

The wind and sand storm earlier this year severely damaged or completely destroyed many wheat fields. Pastures remain very dry as summer nears.

High Flow Experiment 2023! — USGS

Glen Canyon Dam released higher flows over the past three days, with a peak discharge of over 40k cfs. This experiment aims to rebuild beaches, disrupt invasive fish breeding, and increase invertebrate abundance and diversity.

The latest “The Splash” newsletter is hot off the presses from the #Colorado Water Conservation Board @CWCB_DNR

Updated Colorado River 4-Panel plot thru Water Year 2022 showing reservoirs, flows, temperatures and precipitation. All trends are in the wrong direction. Since original 2017 plot, conditions have deteriorated significantly. Brad Udall via Twitter: https://twitter.com/bradudall/status/1593316262041436160

Click the link to read the newsletter on the Colorado Water Conservation Board website. Here’s an excerpt:

On April 11, the Bureau of Reclamation released a draft Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement (SEIS). The SEIS is a mechanism to adjust the current operating guidelines for Glen Canyon (Lake Powell) and Hoover Dams (Lake Mead), providing tools for Reclamation to adapt to potentially dry years in the next few water years. Several news outlets, includingย The Colorado Sun,ย Politico,ย Colorado Politics, andย AP News, covered the release with commentary from CWCB experts. CWCB Director and Colorado Commissioner Becky Mitchell is seeking public input to inform Coloradoโ€™s response to the SEIS.ย Share your feedback.ย 

Navajo Unit Spring Operations Forecast — Reclamation

From email from Reclamation (Susan Novak Behery)

High snowpack in the San Juan River Basin this year has led to an above-average inflow forecast into the reservoir.  The latest most probable inflow forecast from the Colorado River Basin Forecast Center is for 150% of average inflows from snowmelt runoff. 

While most of the releases will be made to recover reservoir storage, Reclamation is planning to conduct a channel maintenance release from Navajo Dam. ย The release will ramp up slowly, peaking at 5,000 cfs for at least 11 days before ramping back down. This operation is expected to begin the last week of May and last through the third week of June. The exact schedule dates are to be determined as they will be timed to coincide with the peak on the Animas River. ย A notice with the final start date will be sent out approximately one week prior to beginning this release. ย Please stay tuned for updates…

For more information, please see the following resources below:

Bureau of Reclamation:  

San Juan County, New Mexico, Office of Emergency Management:   

San Juan County, Utah, Office of Emergency Management:

Navajo Nation Department of Emergency Management:  

Pine River Marina at Navajo Reservoir. Photo credit: Reclamation

2023 #COleg: State legislators recently introduced bipartisan legislation โ€” โ€œSB23-295, #ColoradoRiver #Drought Task Forceโ€ โ€” to create a task force to address the historic drought conditions on the Colorado River — Western Resource Advocates #COriver #aridification

The Colorado River flows from its headwaters region, near Parshall, Colo. Credit: Mitch Tobin, The Water Desk, CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

Click the link to read the release on the Western Resource Advocates website:

Earlier this month, Colorado Senator Dylan Roberts, House Speaker Julie McCluskie, Senator Perry Will, and Representative Marc Catlin introduced bipartisan legislation โ€” โ€œSenate Bill 23-295, Colorado River Drought Task Forceโ€ โ€” to create a task force to make legislative recommendations to address the historic drought conditions on the Colorado River. The task force will be responsible for generating legislative recommendations that:

  • Proactively address climate-driven drought impacts on the Colorado River and its tributaries;
  • Avoid disproportionate economic/environmental impacts to any region of the state, ensuring acquisition of agricultural water rights is voluntary, temporary, and compensated;
  • Provide for collaboration among the Colorado River Water Conservation District, Southwestern Water Conservation District, and the State of Colorado in the design and implementation of drought security programs;
  • Explore ways new programs can benefit the environment and recreation;
  • Evaluate sources of revenue for the acquisition of program water; and
  • Establishes the Tribal Sub-Task Force to ensure there is appropriate space and time for their unique consideration.

A three-decade long drought threatens the Colorado River. Just last week, and previous years before, our allies at American Rivers listed it number one on their top endangered rivers in the United States. Coloradoโ€™s water security is decreasing as a result. These diminishing supplies are threatening our drinking water, agriculture, and environmental and recreational opportunities.

More flexible tools, that could be recommended by the task force established in SB23-295, can help Colorado communities respond to threats and impacts of drought exasperated by a warming climate and over allocation. Without clear action in the immediate future, these problems will only get worse.

Reach out to your legislator today to let them know you support action to make Colorado more resilient in the face of drought and climate change.

Are #Denver’s best practices for outdoor watering unique? Take a look at some of the advice given by #water utilities from #California to #Florida — @DenverWater

Sunrise Denver skyline from Sloan’s Lake September 2, 2022.

Click the link to read the article on the Denver Water website (Kim Ungerย Kristi Delynko):

If you have lived in Denver for a few years or longer, you probably know that the efficient way to water landscapes is to follow Denver Waterโ€™s summer watering rules, which begin every year on May 1 and run through Oct. 1.

But what about those thousands of people who have moved to the City and County of Denver in recent years?

As it turns out, they are pretty familiar with Denver Waterโ€™s rules too.

Best practices for efficient, healthy outdoor watering are not just a Denver thing. They are the same best practices youโ€™ll find utilities advocating for in California, Texas, Arizona, Illinois and Florida โ€” the states where many of Denverโ€™s newcomers came from.

How did we figure that out? We looked at federal census data (specifically the 72,490 people who moved in between 2012 and 2016) to learn which five states, and which county in each of those states, were the biggest suppliers of our recent round of new neighbors in Denver.

Then we looked at a sampling of the water providers in each of those counties to see what they advise their own customers to do.

Hereโ€™s what they all said:

  • There is no need to water when itโ€™s raining, Mother Nature can handle it. And if itโ€™s windy, it is best to hold off on watering.
  • When using a hose to wash the car, or water the lawn or trees, always use a shut-off nozzle in order to use only what you need, right when and where you need it.
  • When sweeping sidewalks and driveways, brooms are fantastic tools to use.
  • Allowing water to run off onto sidewalks or the street wastes water.
  • Watering in the cooler parts of the day, between 6 p.m. and 10 a.m., cuts down on evaporation.

So, when it comes to outdoor watering, there’s no need for a native versus transplant turf battle. Instead, let’s raise a cool glass of safe, clean tap water to everyone who knows the best way to water landscapes efficiently.

And if you need a refresher on the ins and outs of Denver Waterโ€™s annual summer watering rules, check out denverwater.org/BestPractices for more information. Youโ€™ll find all kinds of efficiency tips there for water use inside and out.

    #Water and #sewer demands have Animas Valley residents concerned about proposed RV park — The #Durango Herald

    View of Denver and Rio Grande (Silverton Branch) Railroad tracks and the Animas River in San Juan County, Colorado; shows the Needle Mountains. Summer, 1911. Denver Public Library Special Collections

    Click the link to read the article on The Durango Herald website (Christian Burney). Here’s an excerpt:

    Density concerns, soundscapes and dark skies, wildlife impacts, preservation of the Animas River Corridor, and water and sanitation demands are only half of the issues Animas Valley residents face if a proposed luxury RV park is approved by La Plata County. Residents of the Animas Valley have also questioned the legality of the proposed RV park in terms of zoning. A preliminary sketch plan of the development targeting 876 Trimble Lane (County Road 252) was approved by the La Plata County Planning Commission in January and is now moving through a minor land-use permit process. Arizona-based developer Scott Roberts wants to build a 306-stall luxury RV park, which includes 49 tiny homes the proposal calls โ€œadventure cabins.โ€ But some residents fear the scope of the potential development would impede on the rural lifestyle they enjoy.

    The Animas Valley Action Coalition, a community group organized to protect the Animas Valley from developments that pose major impacts to the area, hosted a meeting Saturday at the Durango Public Library to discuss impacts and continue the conversation about Robertsโ€™ RV park. About 58 residents and friends of the Animas Valley gathered to hear two presentations about the history of the valley and an opportunity to protect the Animas River Corridor. Tom Penn said AVAC community members have different expectations of the RV park proposal. Some people donโ€™t want an RV park to be built at all and others would prefer a smaller development.