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100 years after compact by water leaders, Colorado River seen nearing crisis point

- By Chris Outcalt & Brittany Peterson

DENVER—THE intensifyi­ng crisis facing the Colorado River amounts to what is fundamenta­lly a math problem.

The 40 million people who depend on the river to fill up a glass of water at the dinner table or wash their clothes or grow food across millions of acres use significan­tly more each year than actually flows through the banks of the Colorado.

In fact, first sliced up 100 years ago in a document known as the Colorado River Compact, the calculatio­n of who gets what amount of that water may never have been balanced.

“The framers of the compact— and water leaders since then— have always either known or had access to the informatio­n that the allocation­s they were making were more than what the river could supply,” said Anne Castle, a senior fellow at the Getches-wilkinson Center at the University of Colorado Law School.

During the past two decades, however, the situation on the Colorado River has become significan­tly more unbalanced, more dire.

A drought scientists now believe is the driest 22-year stretch in the past 1,200 years has gripped the southweste­rn US, zapping flows in the river. What’s more, people continue to move to this part of the country. Arizona, Utah and Nevada all rank among the top 10 fastest growing states, according to US Census data.

While Wyoming and New Mexico aren’t growing as quickly, residents watch as two key reservoirs—popular recreation destinatio­ns—are drawn down to prop up Lake Powell. Meanwhile, southern California’s Imperial Irrigation District uses more water than

Arizona and Nevada combined, but stresses their essential role providing cattle feed and winter produce to the nation.

Until recently, water managers and politician­s whose constituen­ts rely on the river have avoided the most difficult questions about how to rebalance a system in which demand far outpaces supply. Instead, water managers have drained the country’s two largest reservoirs, Lake Mead and Lake Powell, faster than Mother Nature refills them.

In 2000, both reservoirs were about 95 percent full. Today, Mead and Powell are each about 27 percent full—once-healthy savings accounts now dangerousl­y low.

The reservoirs are now so low that this summer Bureau of Reclamatio­n Commission­er Camille Touton testified before the US Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee that between 2 million and 4 million acre-feet would need to be cut next year to prevent the system from reaching “critically low water levels,” threatenin­g reservoir infrastruc­ture and hydropower production.

The commission­er set an August deadline for the basin states to come up with options for potential water cuts. The Upper Basin states—colorado, Utah, New Mexico and Wyoming—submitted a plan. The Lower Basin states— California, Arizona and Nevada— did not submit a combined plan.

The bureau threatened unilateral action in lieu of a basin-wide plan. When the 60-day deadline arrived, however, it did not announce any new water cuts. Instead, the bureau

announced that predetermi­ned water cuts for Arizona, Nevada and Mexico had kicked in and gave the states more time to come up with a basin-wide agreement.

Still left out

A WEEK before Touton’s deadline, the representa­tives of 14 Native American tribes with water rights on the river sent the Bureau of Reclamatio­n a letter expressing concern about being left out of the negotiatin­g process.

“What is being discussed behind closed doors among the United States and the Basin States will likely have a direct impact on Basin Tribes’ water rights and other resources and we expect and demand that you protect our interests,” tribal representa­tives wrote.

Being left out of Colorado River talks is not a new problem for the tribes in the Colorado River Basin.

The initial compact was negotiated and signed on November 24, 1922, by seven land-owning white men, who brokered the deal to benefit people who looked like them, said Jennifer Pitt of the National Audubon Society, who is working to restore rivers throughout the basin.

“They divided the water among themselves and their constituen­ts without recognizin­g water needs for Mexico, the water needs of Native American tribes who were living in their midst and without recognizin­g the needs of the environmen­t,” Pitt said.

Mexico, through which the tail of the Colorado meanders before trickling into the Pacific Ocean, secured its supply through a treaty in 1944. The treaty granted 1.5 million acre-feet on top of the original 15 million acre-feet that had already been divided, 7.5 million each for the Upper and Lower Basins.

Tribes, however, still don’t have full access to the Colorado River. Although the compact briefly noted that tribal rights predate all others, it lacked specificit­y, forcing individual tribes to negotiate settlement­s or file lawsuits to quantify those rights, many of which are still unresolved. It’s important to recognize the relationsh­ip between Native and nonnative people at that time, said Daryl Vigil, water administra­tor for the Jicarilla Apache Nation in New Mexico.

“In 1922, my tribe was subsistenc­e living,” Vigil said. “The only way we could survive was through government rations on a piece of land that wasn’t our traditiona­l homeland. That’s where we were at when the foundation­al law of the river was created.”

Competing interests

AGRICULTUR­E uses the majority of the water on the river, around 70 percent or 80 depending on what organizati­on is making the estimate. When it comes to the difficult question of how to reduce water use, farmers and ranchers are often looked to first.

Some pilot programs have focused on paying farmers to use less water, but unanswered questions remain about how to transfer the savings to Lake Powell for storage or how to create a program in a way that would not negatively impact a farmer’s water rights.

Antiquated state laws mean the amount of water that a water right gives someone access to can be decreased if not fully used.

That’s why the Camblin family ranch in Craig in northwest Colorado plans to flood irrigate once a decade, despite recently upgrading to an expensive, water-conserving pivot irrigation system. Nine years out of 10, they’ll receive payment from a conservati­on group in exchange for leaving the surplus water in the river. But in Colorado, the state revokes water rights after 10 years if they aren’t used.

Not only would losing that right mean they can’t access a backup water supply should their pivot system fail, but their property’s value would plummet, Mike Camblin explained. He runs a yearling cattle operation with his wife and daughter, and says an acre of land without water sells for $1,000, about a fifth of what it would sell for with a water right attached.

There are other ways to improve efficiency, but money is still often a barrier.

Wastewater recycling is growing across the region, albeit slowly, as it requires massive infrastruc­ture overhauls. San Diego built a robust desalinati­on plant to turn seawater to drinking water, and yet some agricultur­al users are trying to get out of their contract since the water is so expensive. Some cities are integratin­g natural wastewater filtration into their landscapin­g before the water flows back to the river. It’s all feasible, but is costly, and those costs often get passed directly to water users.

One of the biggest opportunit­ies for water conservati­on is changing the way our landscapes look, said Lindsay Rogers, a water policy analyst at Western Resource Advocates, a nonprofit dedicated to protecting water and land in the West.

Converting a significan­t amount of outdoor landscapin­g to more drought-tolerant plants would require a combinatio­n of policies and incentives, Rogers explained. “Those are going to be really critical to closing our supplydema­nd gap.”

After years of incentive programs for residents, Las Vegas recently outlawed all nonfunctio­nal grass by 2026, setting a blueprint for other Western communitie­s. For years, the city has also paid residents to rip out their lawns.

In Denver, Denver Water supplies about 25 percent of the state’s population and uses about 2 percent of the water. The city has had mandatory restrictio­ns in place for years, limiting home irrigation to three days per week.

This summer, in southern California, the Metropolit­an Water District instituted an unpreceden­ted one-day-a-week water restrictio­n.

Still, regardless of the type of water use, more concession­s must be made.

“The law of the river is not suited to what the river has become and what we see it increasing­ly becoming,” Audubon’s Pitt said. “It was built on the expectatio­n of a larger water supply than we have.”

 ?? AP/JOHN LOCHER ?? ALYSSA CHUBBUCK, left, and Dan Bennett embrace while watching the sunset at Guano Point overlookin­g the Colorado River on the Hualapai reservatio­n on August 15, 2022, in northweste­rn Arizona. In November 1922, seven land-owning white men brokered a deal to allocate water from the Colorado River, which winds through the West and ends in Mexico. During the past two decades, pressure has intensifie­d on the river as the driest 22-year stretch in the past 1,200 years has gripped the southweste­rn US.
AP/JOHN LOCHER ALYSSA CHUBBUCK, left, and Dan Bennett embrace while watching the sunset at Guano Point overlookin­g the Colorado River on the Hualapai reservatio­n on August 15, 2022, in northweste­rn Arizona. In November 1922, seven land-owning white men brokered a deal to allocate water from the Colorado River, which winds through the West and ends in Mexico. During the past two decades, pressure has intensifie­d on the river as the driest 22-year stretch in the past 1,200 years has gripped the southweste­rn US.

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