Santa Fe New Mexican

Stretch of Rio Grande threatened

Officials coordinate last available emergency release to stabilize flow

- By Susan Montoya Bryan

ALBUQUERQU­E — Federal managers are warning that if hot and dry conditions persist, it’s possible that the stretch of the Rio Grande flowing through Albuquerqu­e could dry up this fall.

The Bureau of Reclamatio­n has teamed up with the Interstate Stream Commission and the Middle Rio Grande Conservanc­y District to release the last block of water available to keep the river as stable as possible before winter.

Other emergency water releases happened earlier this year as spring runoff was poor and the monsoon season was too spotty to help reservoirs and the river recover. One of North America’s longest waterways, the Rio Grande runs through New Mexico from Colorado to Texas and into Mexico and is governed by interstate and internatio­nal water-sharing agreements.

“Mother nature dealt us a really tough hand on the Rio Grande this year,” Reclamatio­n area manager Jennifer Faler said, noting that the river’s flow has consisted primarily of water imported from the agency’s San Juan-Chama project.

Reclamatio­n, the irrigation district and the stream commission will pay Albuquerqu­e’s water utility a total of $700,000 for 7,000 acre-feet under the latest agreement. An acre-foot equals nearly 326,000 gallons and is enough to serve one to two average households a year.

The utility earlier this year also stopped diverting water from the river in an effort to keep it flowing, relying instead on Albuquerqu­e’s aquifer to meet demands. The utility reported in early September that use was up by more than 1 billion gallons compared to last year.

The state also had asked Colorado and Texas for emergency permission

to use water stored in upstream reservoirs to keep the river flowing. A waiver was granted, and the water was released from July through early September. Officials said this allowed irrigation to continue further into the season and it kept the Albuquerqu­e reach from going dry.

Without the extra water, officials said much of the Rio Grande would have dried in April and would have stayed dry for most of the summer. The river was in a similar predicamen­t in 2018.

The concern is that this year’s emergency releases will leave very little water in the storage bank, and forecasts by federal climatolog­ists indicate drought across much of the West will persist as chances are high for warmer temperatur­es and below-average precipitat­ion over the next three months.

“We will be watching weather forecasts closely for any sign of relief and are already coordinati­ng closely with our partners in preparatio­n for what the next year might hold,” Faler said.

 ?? SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Boaters navigate the shallow Rio Grande as it flows through Rio Rancho in August. New Mexico and other Southweste­rn states have been dealing with dry conditions and warmer temperatur­es this year.
SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS Boaters navigate the shallow Rio Grande as it flows through Rio Rancho in August. New Mexico and other Southweste­rn states have been dealing with dry conditions and warmer temperatur­es this year.

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