San Diego Union-Tribune

MAJOR WATER CUTBACKS FROM COLORADO RIVER LOOM

Federal official says reservoirs reaching perilously low levels

- BY IAN JAMES James writes for the Los Angeles Times.

As the West endures another year of unrelentin­g drought worsened by climate change, the Colorado River’s reservoirs have declined so low that major water cuts will be necessary next year to reduce risks of supplies reaching perilously low levels, a top federal water official said Tuesday.

Bureau of Reclamatio­n Commission­er Camille Calimlim Touton said during a Senate hearing in Washington that federal officials now believe protecting “critical levels” at the country’s largest reservoirs — Lake Mead and Lake Powell — will require much larger reductions in water deliveries.

“A warmer, drier West is what we are seeing today,” Touton told the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee. “And the challenges we are seeing today are unlike anything we have seen in our history.”

The needed cuts, she said, amount to between 2 million and 4 million acrefeet next year.

For comparison, California is entitled to 4.4 million acre-feet of Colorado River water per year, while Arizona’s allotment is 2.8 million.

The push for a new emergency deal to cope with the Colorado River’s shrinking flow comes just seven months after officials from California, Arizona and Nevada signed an agreement to take significan­tly less water out of Lake Mead, and six weeks after the federal government announced it is holding back a large quantity of water in Lake Powell to reduce risks of the reservoir dropping to a point where Glen Canyon Dam would no longer generate electricit­y.

Despite those efforts and a previous deal among the states to share in the shortages, the two reservoirs stand at or near record-low levels. Lake Mead near Las Vegas has dropped to 28 percent of its full capacity, while Lake Powell on the Utah-Arizona border is now just 27 percent full.

Touton said it’s critical to achieve the additional cutbacks and her agency is in talks with the seven states that depend on the river to develop a plan for the reductions in the next 60 days. She warned that the Bureau of Reclamatio­n has the authority to “act unilateral­ly to protect the system, and we will protect the system.”

Though Touton didn’t spell out what that could entail, the Interior Department could impose cuts if the states fail to reach an agreement on their own. Touton said her agency is “working with the states and tribes in having this discussion.”

The Colorado River supplies water to nearly 40 million people in cities from Denver to Los Angeles and farmlands from the Rocky Mountains to the U.S.-Mexico border. The river has long been over-allocated, and its reservoirs have declined dramatical­ly since 2000 during a severe drought that research shows is being intensifie­d by global warming and that some scientists describe as the long-term “aridificat­ion” of the Southwest.

“What has been a slowmotion train wreck for 20 years is accelerati­ng, and the moment of reckoning is near,” said John Entsminger, general manager of the Southern Nevada Water Authority, which supplies the Las Vegas area.

He pointed out that Lake Mead’s water level, now at 1,045 feet above sea level, has continued to decline toward critically low levels. Hoover Dam could still release water down to a level of 895 feet, but below that, water would no longer pass through the dam to supply California, Arizona and Mexico — a level known as “dead pool.”

“We are 150 feet from 25 million Americans losing access to the Colorado River, and the rate of decline is accelerati­ng,” Entsminger told the senators.

Avoiding “potentiall­y catastroph­ic conditions,” Entsminger said, will require reductions that many water managers previously considered unattainab­le.

In talking with representa­tives of other states, Entsminger said, they all recognize the urgency of the situation and are working to increase conservati­on efforts.

Entsminger pointed out that roughly 80 percent of the river’s flow is used for agricultur­e, and most of that for thirsty crops like alfalfa, which is mainly grown for cattle, both in the U.S. and overseas.

“I’m not suggesting that farmers stop farming, but rather that they carefully consider crop selection and make the investment­s needed to optimize irrigation efficiency,” Entsminger said.

Last year, the federal government declared a shortage on the Colorado River for the first time, triggering substantia­l cutbacks in water deliveries to Arizona, Nevada and Mexico. Farmers in parts of Arizona have left some fields dry and unplanted, and have turned to more groundwate­r pumping.

The cuts have yet to limit supplies for Southern California, but that could change as the reservoirs continue to drop.

The timeline that Touton laid out, to come up with an agreement for water reductions within 60 days, puts the deadline just before the bureau is scheduled to release its mid-August projection­s for reservoir levels on the river. Those projection­s determine the level of the shortage in 2023 and the severity of the delivery cuts.

 ?? LUIS SINCO LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? The Hoover Dam stands in front of Lake Mead, where white surfaces on the lake’s rocky edges show how low water levels have dropped during the long drought.
LUIS SINCO LOS ANGELES TIMES The Hoover Dam stands in front of Lake Mead, where white surfaces on the lake’s rocky edges show how low water levels have dropped during the long drought.

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