Santa Fe New Mexican

Colorado River water users gather

Record drought has cut supply as agreement remains elusive

- By Ken Ritter

LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Living with less water in the U.S. Southwest is the focus this week for state and federal water administra­tors, tribal officials, farmers, academics and business representa­tives meeting about the drought-stricken and overpromis­ed Colorado River.

The Colorado River Water Users Associatio­n conference, normally a largely academic three-day affair, comes at a time of growing concern about the river’s future after more than two decades of record drought attributed to climate change.

“The Colorado River system is in a very dire condition,” Dan Bunk, a U.S. Bureau of Reclamatio­n water manager, declared during internet presentati­ons streamed Nov. 29 and Dec. 2 that invited public comment about possible actions.

“Flows during the past 23-year period … are the lowest in the past 120 years and [among] the lowest in more than 1,200 years,” Bunk told the webinar audience. The deadline for public submission­s is Dec. 20 for a process expected to yield a final report by summer.

Bunk said the two largest reservoirs on the river — Lake Mead behind Hoover Dam on the Nevada-Arizona state line and Lake Powell formed by the Glen Canyon Dam on the Arizona-Utah line — are at unpreceden­ted low levels. Lake Mead was at 100 percent capacity in mid-1999. Today it is 28 percent full. Lake Powell, last full in June 1980, is at 25 percent.

Scientists attribute extended drought to warmer and drier weather in the West to longterm, human-caused climate change. The effect has been dramatic on a vast river basin where the math never added up: The amount of water it receives doesn’t meet the amount that is promised.

Lake Powell’s drop in March to historical­ly low water levels raised worries about losing the ability — perhaps within the next few months — to produce hydropower that today serves about 5 million customers in

seven states. If power production ceases at Glen Canyon Dam, rural electric cooperativ­es, cities and tribal utilities would be forced to seek more expensive options.

Reclamatio­n water managers responded with plans to hold back more water in Lake Powell but warned Lake Mead water levels would drop.

Meanwhile, bodies have surfaced as Lake Mead’s shoreline recedes, including the corpse of a man who authoritie­s say was shot, maybe in the 1970s, and stuffed in a barrel. He remains unidentifi­ed. The gruesome discoverie­s renewed interest in the lore of organized crime and the early days of the Las Vegas Strip, just a 30-minute drive from the lake.

The U.S. Bureau of Reclamatio­n in June told the seven states that are part of the Colorado River Basin — Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada,

New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming — to determine how to use at least 15 percent less water next year, or have restrictio­ns imposed on them. Despite deadlines, discussion­s have not resulted in agreements.

Bureau officials use the image of pouring tea from one cup to another to describe how water from Rocky Mountain snowmelt

is captured in Lake Powell, then released downriver through the Grand Canyon to Lake Mead. About 70 percent is allocated for irrigation, sustaining a $15 billion-a-year agricultur­al industry that supplies 90 percent of U.S. winter vegetables.

“Due to critically low current reservoir conditions, and the potential for worsening drought which threatens critical infrastruc­ture and public health and safety … operationa­l strategies must be revisited,” Bunk said.

This year’s meeting of water recipients begins Wednesday at Caesars Palace on the Las Vegas Strip.

The event theme, “A New Century for the Colorado River Compact,” marks 100 years since a 1922 interstate agreement divvied water shares among interests in the seven states now home to 40 million people and millions of farmed acres.

Agricultur­al interests got the biggest share.

Native American tribes weren’t included and were referenced in one sentence: “Nothing in this compact shall be construed as affecting the obligation­s of the United States of America to Indian tribes.”

It wasn’t until 1944 that a separate agreement promised a share of water to Mexico.

Today, tribes are at the table and a Mexico delegation is due to attend the conference. U.S. cities that receive river water include Denver, Salt Lake City, Albuquerqu­e, Las Vegas, Phoenix, Los Angeles and San Diego.

Many call conservati­on crucial. Among conference topic titles are “Messaging in a More Water-Challenged world” and “The Next 100 Years Begins Now.”

“The ongoing drought is a stark reminder that water conservati­on is not just smart planning but an absolute necessity to save the life of the Colorado River,” Amelia Flores, chairwoman of Colorado River Indian Tribes, said ahead of the event. The tribal reservatio­n in western Arizona includes more than 110 miles of Colorado River shoreline.

“Whether it’s fallowing fields, upgrading irrigation canals, or modernizin­g farming methods,” Flores said, “decisions made now will have lasting consequenc­es.”

Throughout the river basin, warnings have increased and measures have tightened markedly in 2022.

In April, water administra­tors in Southern California imposed a one-day-a-week outdoor watering limit on more than 6 million people.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Colorado River flows through the Grand Canyon on the Hualapai Reservatio­n on Aug. 15 in northweste­rn Arizona. Living with less water in the U.S. Southwest is the focus of a conference Wednesday in Las Vegas, Nev., about the drought-stricken and overpromis­ed Colorado River.
JOHN LOCHER/ASSOCIATED PRESS The Colorado River flows through the Grand Canyon on the Hualapai Reservatio­n on Aug. 15 in northweste­rn Arizona. Living with less water in the U.S. Southwest is the focus of a conference Wednesday in Las Vegas, Nev., about the drought-stricken and overpromis­ed Colorado River.

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