Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Water pressure

Arizona farmers to bear brunt of cuts from river

- FELICIA FONSECA

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — Arizona is prepared to lose about one-fifth of the water the state gets from the Colorado River in what could be the first federally declared shortage in the river that supplies millions of people in the U.S. West and Mexico, state officials said last week.

Arizona stands to lose more than any other state in the Colorado River basin that also takes in parts of Wyoming, New Mexico, Utah, Colorado, Nevada and California. That’s because Arizona agreed long ago to be the first in line for cuts in exchange for federal money for a canal system to deliver the water to Arizona’s major metropolit­an areas.

The Arizona Department of Water Resources and the Central Arizona Project, which manages the canal system, said the anticipate­d reductions will be painful, but the state has prepared for decades for a shortage through conservati­on, water banking, partnershi­ps and other efforts.

“It doesn’t make it any less painful. But at least we know what is coming,” said Ted Cooke, general manager of the Central Arizona Project.

Farmers in central Arizona’s Pinal County, who already have been fallowing land amid the ongoing drought and improving wells to pump groundwate­r in anticipati­on of the reductions, will bear the brunt of the cuts. Most farms there are family farms among the state’s top producers of livestock, dairy, cotton, barley, wheat and alfalfa.

In Pinal County, up to 40% of farmland that relies on Colorado River water could be fallowed over the next few years, said Stefanie Smallhouse, president of the Arizona Farm Bureau Federation.

“That’s a big blow,” she said. “I can’t think of many other businesses that can take a 40% cut in their income within a few months and still be sustainabl­e. When you farm, it’s not only a business; it’s your livelihood.”

The U.S. Bureau of Reclamatio­n projected earlier this month Lake Mead, which delivers water to Arizona, Nevada, California and Mexico, will fall below 1,075 feet for the first time in June 2021. If the lake remains below that level in August when the bureau issues its official projection for 2022, Arizona and Nevada will lose water.

The two states already voluntaril­y have given up water under a separate drought contingenc­y plan.

The voluntary and mandatory Tier 1 cuts mean Arizona will lose 18% of its Colorado River supply, or 512,000 acre-feet of water. The amount represents 30% of the water that goes to the Central Arizona Project and 8% of Arizona’s overall water supply.

Some of that water will be replaced through water exchanges, transfers from cities to irrigation districts or through water stored in Lake Mead in a sort of shell game. The state, tribes and others also contribute­d financiall­y to help develop groundwate­r infrastruc­ture.

“We like to think we find ways to take care of ourselves collective­ly,” said Tom Buschatzke, director of the Arizona Department of Water Resources.

Smallhouse said farmers are thankful for the help coming but believes there’s more flexibilit­y in the system to further ease the reductions. While farmers regularly face criticism for the amount of water they use, Smallhouse said the coronaviru­s pandemic highlighte­d the importance of a local supply chain for meat, dairy and crops.

Some water users simply won’t get the water they once had if the Bureau of Reclamatio­n’s projection­s pan out.

The cutbacks come at a time when temperatur­es are rising and drought has tightened its grip on the U.S. Southwest, increasing­ly draining Lake Mead and Lake Powell, the two largest man-made reservoirs in the U.S., to their lowest levels since they were filled.

Lake Mead along the Arizona-Nevada border has dropped by about 16 feet since this time last year. Lake Powell on the Arizona-Utah border has fallen by 35 feet, the Bureau of Reclamatio­n said.

The reductions in Arizona won’t hit cities or people’s homes, or affect water delivered through the canal system for Native American tribes. Still, anyone living in the desert should be concerned — but not panic — about water and think ways to live with less, said Rhett Larson, an associate professor at Arizona State University and an expert on water law and policy.

“The fact that you’re not feeling it in your tap doesn’t mean you won’t feel it at the grocery store because Pinal County farmers are growing a lot of the things you eat and use,” he said.

“The fact that you’re not feeling it in your tap doesn’t mean you won’t feel it at the grocery store because Pinal County farmers are growing a lot of the things you eat and use.”

— Rhett Larson, an associate professor at Arizona State University

 ?? (File Photo/AP/John Locher) ?? Lightning strikes in July 2014 over Lake Mead near Hoover Dam that impounds Colorado River water at the Lake Mead National Recreation Area in Arizona.
(File Photo/AP/John Locher) Lightning strikes in July 2014 over Lake Mead near Hoover Dam that impounds Colorado River water at the Lake Mead National Recreation Area in Arizona.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Ross D. Franklin) ?? The Central Arizona Project canal runs in 2019 through rural desert near Phoenix.
(File Photo/AP/Ross D. Franklin) The Central Arizona Project canal runs in 2019 through rural desert near Phoenix.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Jae C. Hong) ?? A riverboat glides through Lake Mead in 2015 on the Colorado River at Hoover Dam near Boulder City, Nev.
(File Photo/AP/Jae C. Hong) A riverboat glides through Lake Mead in 2015 on the Colorado River at Hoover Dam near Boulder City, Nev.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/ John Locher) ?? A bathtub ring of light minerals delineates the high water mark in June 2020 on Lake Mead at the Lake Mead National Recreation Area near Boulder City.
(File Photo/AP/ John Locher) A bathtub ring of light minerals delineates the high water mark in June 2020 on Lake Mead at the Lake Mead National Recreation Area near Boulder City.

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