Las Vegas Review-Journal

Colorado River states race to agree on cuts by year’s end

- By Christophe­r Flavelle

WASHINGTON — The states that rely on the Colorado River, which is shrinking because of climate change and overuse, are rushing to agree on a longterm deal to share the dwindling resource by the end of the year. They worry that a change in administra­tions after the election could set back talks.

Negotiator­s are seeking an agreement that would prepare for extraordin­ary cuts in the amount of river water that can be tapped. The Colorado provides drinking water to 40 million people in seven states, 30 tribes and Mexico, as well as irrigation for some of America’s most productive farmland.

But the amount of water flowing in the Colorado has declined over time as rising temperatur­es reduce the snowpack that feeds the river.

“How do we live with the river that we have, not the river that we hope and dream for?” said Becky Mitchell, lead negotiator for the state of Colorado.

The rules that govern the distributi­on of Colorado River water expire at the end of 2026. Negotiator­s are trying to reach a deal quickly, in case the White House changes hands. It’s not the prospect of a Republican administra­tion that is particular­ly concerning, negotiator­s said, but rather a change in personnel and the time required to build new relationsh­ips between state and federal officials.

“Whenever there’s an administra­tion change, that significan­tly disrupts things,” said JB Hamby, chair of the Colorado River Board of California and that state’s lead negotiator. “If we can get a draft ready and in place by the end of the year, that will ensure that we get the hard work done.”

The Colorado River hit a crisis a year and a half ago, when dangerousl­y low water levels threatened the water supply for California, Arizona and Nevada, prompting the Biden administra­tion to seek an agreement among states on deep cuts. That crisis receded after last year’s unusually wet winter, which temporaril­y reduced pressure on the river; in May, California, Arizona and Nevada agreed to more modest reductions than what the government had initially sought.

But those negotiatio­ns were a precursor to a much harder challenge. Whatever agreement replaces the current rules will require far deeper reductions than in the past.

“We all have to live within our means,” said Adel Hagekhalil, general manager of the Metropolit­an Water District of Southern California, the largest wholesale drinking water supplier in the country, which gets half its water from the Colorado River.

The challenge, he said, “is figuring out how we’re going to share.”

Those negotiatio­ns are taking place against the backdrop of scant snowfall so far this winter. Last week, California reported that its snowpack was just onefourth of the average level for this point in the season. Monitoring sites across the Colorado River basin report snow measuremen­ts that are less than half their usual levels.

That below-average snowfall “has reinforced that you can potentiall­y have a bad year after a good year,” said Tom Buschatzke, director of Arizona’s Department of Water Resources and the state’s lead negotiator in the talks. “The dry conditions that are leading to a decline in the flow of the river are probably our longterm future.”

Time is short to reach an agreement. The federal agency in charge of the Colorado River, the Bureau of Reclamatio­n, has asked states to propose an agreement by early March, so that the department can issue draft regulation­s by December — weeks before Inaugurati­on Day.

Even if the Biden administra­tion stays in office, finalizing the new rules before the current agreement expires at the end of 2026 will require moving quickly, according to Buschatzke.

That gives states just two months to decide a wide range of questions, including what level of water reductions they should plan for, based on how much the flow of the Colorado might shrink during the course of the deal.

Still, negotiator­s say they’re optimistic about reaching an agreement. Part of the reason is the significan­t federal spending on new infrastruc­ture to use water more efficientl­y, which makes it easier to absorb cuts, according to Camille Touton, commission­er of the Bureau of Reclamatio­n.

She pointed to investment­s such as water recycling in the Gila River Indian Community, south of Phoenix, which returns water to the Colorado River system.

“Funding from the Biden administra­tion allowed us not just to plan for rainy days,” Touton said in an interview. “This is our plan in case it didn’t rain.”

But even with those investment­s, states throughout the Southwest will need to absorb huge cuts in water use. Southern Nevada is home to Las Vegas and depends on water from the Colorado River. The state of Nevada recently outlawed “nonfunctio­nal” patches of grass found along streets and at housing developmen­ts and commercial sites in and around Las Vegas to cut down on water use. The Southern Nevada Water Authority last year also imposed a moratorium on evaporativ­e cooling in new buildings, in favor of other types of air conditioni­ng that use less water.

John Entsminger, head of the Southern Nevada Water Authority and his state’s lead negotiator in the talks, said other cities and states in the Colorado River Basin would need to adopt similar degrees of change.

“It’s going to be difficult,” Entsminger said. “But it can be done.”

 ?? JOHN FRANCIS PETERS / NEW YORK TIMES FILE (2017) ?? The Colorado River passes under a bridge in Yuma, Ariz., on April 2, 2017. The states that rely on the Colorado, which is shrinking because of climate change and overuse, are rushing to agree on a long-term deal to share the dwindling resource by the end of 2024.
JOHN FRANCIS PETERS / NEW YORK TIMES FILE (2017) The Colorado River passes under a bridge in Yuma, Ariz., on April 2, 2017. The states that rely on the Colorado, which is shrinking because of climate change and overuse, are rushing to agree on a long-term deal to share the dwindling resource by the end of 2024.
 ?? JOE BUGLEWICZ / NEW YORK TIMES FILE (2022) ?? Jaime Gonzalez removes nonfunctio­nal turf from a residentia­l developmen­t in Las Vegas on March 30, 2022. Under a Nevada law passed in 2021 — the first of its kind in the nation — patches of “nonfunctio­nal” grass that serve only an aesthetic purpose must be removed in favor of more desert-friendly landscapin­g in Southern Nevada.
JOE BUGLEWICZ / NEW YORK TIMES FILE (2022) Jaime Gonzalez removes nonfunctio­nal turf from a residentia­l developmen­t in Las Vegas on March 30, 2022. Under a Nevada law passed in 2021 — the first of its kind in the nation — patches of “nonfunctio­nal” grass that serve only an aesthetic purpose must be removed in favor of more desert-friendly landscapin­g in Southern Nevada.

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