Conrad Swanson – East Bay Times https://www.eastbaytimes.com Wed, 11 Jan 2023 14:19:12 +0000 en-US hourly 30 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.1 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/32x32-ebt.png?w=32 Conrad Swanson – East Bay Times https://www.eastbaytimes.com 32 32 116372269 What Lauren Boebert got from her fight against Kevin McCarthy https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/11/lauren-boebert-kevin-mccarthy-concessions-speaker/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/11/lauren-boebert-kevin-mccarthy-concessions-speaker/#respond Wed, 11 Jan 2023 14:03:17 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8712176&preview=true&preview_id=8712176 After holding out against U.S. Rep. Kevin McCarthy’s long-desired bid to become Speaker of the House for four days, U.S. Rep. Lauren Boebert and several others finally acquiesced but not before securing what she called a “massive victory” for Americans.

“We changed the way bills will be passed,” Boebert said in a release. “We changed the way the government will be funded. We changed the ways committees will be formed. We secured votes on term limits, the fair tax, the Texas Border Plan, and so much more.”

McCarthy offered these changes as concessions in exchange for Boebert’s support. Or, rather, Boebert merely voted “present” during the final House vote for speaker rather than actively voting against McCarthy.

The concessions are largely symbolic, though, Justin Gollob, a political scientist with Colorado Mesa University, said. They might not substantially change the way all of Congress passes new laws so much as constantly reminding Speaker McCarthy that he’s on a “very short leadership leash.”

At any point, a small group of House Republicans, possibly as few as five, could disrupt the entire chamber, holding up legislation or calling McCarthy’s leadership into question, Gollob said.

“That’s the real big win here,” he said. “Their interests can’t be ignored.”

During his negotiations with Boebert and the other Republicans opposing his speakership, McCarthy agreed to assign some of them to select House committees, positioning them to have more influence on proposed legislation over the next two years.

Boebert highlighted four other concessions from McCarthy in an unpublished op-ed submitted to The Denver Post. The Denver Post’s opinion section does not publish guest commentary submissions that have already run in other publications.

First, Boebert wrote that new legislation proposed in the House must have a single subject. This means that unrelated proposals (infrastructure and protections for butterflies, she used as an example) can’t be lumped together.

Second, lawmakers should be allowed to have at least 72 hours to read and understand bills before they vote on them, Boebert said.

Third, Boebert said the House will begin work on an actual federal budget. This is meant to replace the years of continuing resolutions meant to keep the government operating rather than Congress passing a full budget.

And finally, now any single representative can call for a vote to replace McCarthy, Boebert noted.

McCarthy also promised votes on border security and congressional term limits, The Hill reported.

Whether the first three concessions change much in the day-to-day work of Congress remains to be seen, Gollob said. But there might not be a major, concrete shift.

“The House is just one chamber in Congress, and Congress is just one branch of three in the federal government,” he said. “It’s a very complex process.”

Even so, Boebert noted that if she and other House Republicans aren’t satisfied with McCarthy’s direction they have the fourth concession to keep him in check.

“Republican leadership must follow through on these promises and we have the accountability in place to ensure that occurs,” Boebert wrote.

On the flip side, Boebert appears likely to face little negative consequence for her opposition to McCarthy. With the Republican majority so slim, party leadership can’t afford to alienate their members.

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https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/11/lauren-boebert-kevin-mccarthy-concessions-speaker/feed/ 0 8712176 2023-01-11T06:03:17+00:00 2023-01-11T06:19:12+00:00
Can the West save the Colorado River before it’s too late? Here are 8 possible solutions https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/09/colorado-river-water-cuts-crisis-solutions/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/09/colorado-river-water-cuts-crisis-solutions/#respond Mon, 09 Jan 2023 19:09:35 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8710050&preview=true&preview_id=8710050 Conditions on the drying Colorado River are worsening faster than expected. States can’t agree on how to divide water cuts. Native American officials say they’re still largely shut out from the bargaining table and murmurs of a dystopian “water war” scenario now punctuate the conversations.

The crisis is over a century in the making and water experts have been ringing alarm bells for decades. Now government officials have weeks or months, not years, to find ways to save massive amounts of water.

At risk are the country’s two largest reservoirs — lakes Powell and Meadboth of which are losing water. Levels could drop so low this year that Glen Canyon and Hoover dams would no longer be able to generate electricity for millions of people. By the end of next year, Powell’s water level could fall so low that its dam will only be able to send smaller quantities of water downstream to Arizona, California and Nevada.

Federal officials need the seven states in the Colorado River Basin to save at least 2 million acre-feet but water managers now acknowledge that number might need to be three times higher, enough to bury the entire state of Rhode Island under more than seven feet of water.

And that’s just so the basin can survive long enough to plan for the years ahead. Nobody wants to be the one responsible for turning down — or off — taps to farmers, ranchers, companies or even major cities.

  • Lake Mead’s record-low water level is allowing scientists to study...

    Lake Mead’s record-low water level is allowing scientists to study sediment that hasn’t been exposed in nearly a century. (John Locher/AP/FILE)

  • The Central Arizona Project carries Colorado River water on Oct....

    The Central Arizona Project carries Colorado River water on Oct. 25, 2022, outside suburbs in Phoenix, Arizona. The flight for aerial photography was provided by LightHawk. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)

  • Large rotating sprinklers water a field ...

    Large rotating sprinklers water a field growing feed for livestock on July 11, 2022, in Paragonah, Utah. Agriculture businesses have developed new irrigation methods that have less evaporation and water waste, but many small farms and ranches can’t afford to update their systems.

  • Crop circles are seen from the air on Oct. 24,...

    Crop circles are seen from the air on Oct. 24, 2022, near Dateland, Arizona. Agriculture in Arizona holds some of the most senior water rights to Colorado River water in the basin. The flight for aerial photography was provided by LightHawk. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)

  • Light shines off the water flowing in a section of...

    Light shines off the water flowing in a section of the Central Arizona Project on Oct. 24, 2022, near Phoenix, Arizona. The diversion canal diverts water from the Colorado River to support southern Arizona. The flight for aerial photography was provided by LightHawk. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)

  • The Colorado River is the border between California, to the...

    The Colorado River is the border between California, to the left, and Arizona, to the right, seen from the air on Oct. 24, 2022, south of Blythe, California. The flight for aerial photography was provided by LightHawk. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)

  • Drought, overconsumption, and climate change, are main factors dissipating the...

    Drought, overconsumption, and climate change, are main factors dissipating the amount of Colorado River water that will reach the Sea of Cortez on its journey through the Colorado River Delta on October 24, 2022 in Baja California, Mexico. The flight for aerial photography was provided by LightHawk. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)

  • Lake Mead on the Colorado River — the nation’s largest...

    Lake Mead on the Colorado River — the nation’s largest reservoir — is rapidly losing water amid a years-long drought and overuse. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

  • Joe Bernal works on his family’s farm on Thursday, Sept....

    Joe Bernal works on his family’s farm on Thursday, Sept. 1, 2022, in Fruita, Colo. 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 U.S. (Hugh Carey/The Colorado Sun via AP)

  • A man walks between a canal carrying water from the...

    A man walks between a canal carrying water from the Colorado River and a border wall separating San Luis Rio Colorado, Mexico with San Luis, Ariz., on Sunday, Aug. 14, 2022, in San Luis Rio Colorado, Mexico. 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 U.S.(AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

  • A worker diverts water as a sprinkler system is installed...

    A worker diverts water as a sprinkler system is installed for alfalfa at the Cox family farm Monday, Aug. 15, 2022, near Brawley, Calif. 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 U.S. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

  • The Colorado River passes through Grand Junction, Aug. 24, 2022,...

    The Colorado River passes through Grand Junction, Aug. 24, 2022, in Mesa County, Colo. 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 U.S. (Hugh Carey/The Colorado Sun via AP)

  • FILE – A formerly sunken boat sits upright into the...

    FILE – A formerly sunken boat sits upright into the air with its stern stuck in the mud along the shoreline of Lake Mead at the Lake Mead National Recreation Area, June 10, 2022, near Boulder City, Nev. 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 U.S. (AP Photo/John Locher, File)

  • A truck tire once in the water as part of...

    A truck tire once in the water as part of a marina sits on dry ground as water levels have dropped near the Callville Bay Resort & Marina in the Lake Mead National Recreation Area, Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2022, near Boulder City, Nev. 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 U.S. (AP Photo/John Locher)

  • In this photo provided by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation,...

    In this photo provided by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, Commerce Secretary Herbert Hoover presides over the signing of the Colorado River Compact in Santa Fe, N.M., on Nov. 24, 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. (U.S. Bureau of Reclamation via AP)

  • Garnett Querta carries a hose as he fills his water...

    Garnett Querta carries a hose as he fills his water truck on the Hualapai reservation Monday, Aug. 15, 2022, near Peach Springs, Ariz. The divvying up between Colorado River Basin states never took into account Indigenous Peoples or many others, and from the start the calculation of who should get what amount of that water may never have been balanced. (AP Photo/John Locher)

  • Delanna Mart stands on a dock at a lake on...

    Delanna Mart stands on a dock at a lake on Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation, Monday, July 25, 2022, in Fort Duchesne, Utah. The divvying up between Colorado River Basin states never took into account Indigenous Peoples or many others, and from the start the calculation of who should get what amount of that water may never have been balanced. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

  • Water flows along the All-American Canal Saturday, Aug. 13, 2022,...

    Water flows along the All-American Canal Saturday, Aug. 13, 2022, near Winterhaven, Calif. 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 U.S. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

  • Fisherman on a boat float on the Colorado River, June...

    Fisherman on a boat float on the Colorado River, June 27, 2021, near Burns, Colo. 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 U.S. (Hugh Carey/The Colorado Sun via AP)

  • The Metropolitan Water District will repair a leak in a...

    The Metropolitan Water District will repair a leak in a water delivery pipeline next month. The repairs will take place from Sept. 6-20, and will impact several dozen cities including Beverly Hills, Burbank, Glendale, Long Beach, Pasadena, San Fernando and Torrance. Officials discovered a leak in the 36-mile Upper Feeder pipeline, which delivers water from the Colorado River to Southern California, earlier this year. (Courtesy of Metropolitan Water District of Southern California)

  • The Metropolitan Water District will repair a leak in a...

    The Metropolitan Water District will repair a leak in a water delivery pipeline next month. The repairs will take place from Sept. 6-20, and will impact dozens of cities including Beverly Hills, Burbank, Glendale, Long Beach, Pasadena, San Fernando and Torrance. Officials discovered a leak in the 36-mile Upper Feeder pipeline, which delivers water from the Colorado River to Southern California, earlier this year. (Courtesy of Metropolitan Water District of Southern California)

  • A sign marks the water line from 2002 near Lake...

    A sign marks the water line from 2002 near Lake Mead at the Lake Mead National Recreation Area, Saturday, July 9, 2022, near Boulder City, Nev. The largest U.S. reservoir has shrunken to a record low amid a punishing drought and the demands of 40 million people in seven states who are sucking the Colorado River dry. (AP Photo/John Locher)

  • FILE – Visitors view the dramatic bend in the Colorado...

    FILE – Visitors view the dramatic bend in the Colorado River at the popular Horseshoe Bend in Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, in Page, Ariz., on Sept. 9, 2011. Some 40 million people in Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming draw from the Colorado River and its tributaries. The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation is expected to publish hydrology projections on Tuesday, Aug. 16, 2022, that will trigger agreed-upon cuts to states that rely on the river. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, File)

  • This photo taken Monday, April 25, 2022, by the Southern...

    This photo taken Monday, April 25, 2022, by the Southern Nevada Water Authority shows the top of Lake Mead drinking water Intake No. 1 above the surface level of the Colorado River reservoir behind Hoover Dam. The intake is the uppermost of three in the deep, drought-stricken lake that provides Las Vegas with 90% of its drinking water supply. (Southern Nevada Water Authority via AP)

  • FILE – In this Nov. 19, 2012, file photo, water...

    FILE – In this Nov. 19, 2012, file photo, water is released into the Colorado River at the Glen Canyon Dam in Page, Ariz. The elevation of Lake Powell fell below 3,525 feet (1,075 meters), a record low that surpasses a critical threshold at which officials have long warned signals their ability to general hydropower is in jeopardy. (Rob Schumacher/The Arizona Republic via AP, File)

  • Water from an emergency reserve, for use during drought conditions,...

    Water from an emergency reserve, for use during drought conditions, sprays from a well pipe and into a canal for farmers to use on May 8, 2008 near Bakersfield, California. Opening of the Kern County reserve wells began earlier this week. Urgent calls for California residents to conserve water have grown in the wake of the final Sierra Nevada Mountains snow survey of the season indicating a snow depth and water content at only 67 percent of normal levels. The Sierra snowpack is vital to California water supplies and officials are preparing plans for mandatory water conservation. In Southern California, the Metropolitan Water District, cut deliveries to farmers by nearly a third and growers in Fresno and Kings counties have not planted about 200,000 acres of crops, a third of the land irrigated by Westlands Water District. Many farmers are now selling their government-subsidized water for profit instead of using it to plant crops. Much of the California water supply comes from the Colorado River where a continuing eight-year drought has lowered water storage to roughly half of capacity. Dry conditions across the West have already doubled the wildfires this year causing fire officials to brace for a possible repeat of the devastating 2007 southern California wildfire season. (Photo by David McNew/Getty Images)

  • As severe drought grips parts of the Western United States,...

    As severe drought grips parts of the Western United States, a below-average flow of water is expected to flow through the Colorado River Basin into two of its biggest reservoirs, Lake Powell and Lake Mead. (CNN)

  • FILE – In this May 22, 2021, file photo, water...

    FILE – In this May 22, 2021, file photo, water drips from a faucet near boat docks sitting on dry land at the Browns Ravine Cove area of drought-stricken Folsom Lake, in Folsom, Calif. The Metropolitan Water District of Southern California declared a water supply alert for the first time in seven years and is asking residents to voluntarily conserve Tuesday, Aug. 17, 2021, hoping to lessen the need for more severe actions such as reducing water supplies to member agencies. The Metropolitan Water District of Southern California receives about half its water from the Colorado River and State Water Project. (AP Photo/Josh Edelson, File)

  • FILE – In this July 28, 2014, file photo, lightning...

    FILE – In this July 28, 2014, file photo, lightning strikes over Lake Mead near Hoover Dam that impounds Colorado River water at the Lake Mead National Recreation Area in Arizona. The sweeping $1 trillion infrastructure bill approved by the Senate this week includes funding for Western water projects that farmers, water providers and environmentalists say are badly needed across the parched region. (AP Photo/John Locher, File)

  • 1939: Treaty Oak in Austin, Texas near the west bank...

    1939: Treaty Oak in Austin, Texas near the west bank of the Colorado river, thought to be over 500 years old. Comanche and Tejas Indians met for tribal rites beneath it and it is supposed to be the place where the first boundary line treaty between the Indians and the settlers was drawn up. (Photo by Three Lions/Getty Images)

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Local, state and federal officials often mention using more efficient irrigation methods on cropland and they discuss accounting for water lost to evaporation or as it’s transported across thousands of miles of desert terrain. But neither of those two — necessary — steps will be enough.

The Denver Post spoke to experts across the region about ideas, both substantive and farfetched, that could save enough water to keep the Colorado River Basin afloat. Nobody could say precisely how much water a given strategy might provide but each of them acknowledged that officials throughout the American West must think creatively and be prepared to use any and all available resources.

Here are several of those ideas:


A man performs maintenance work in the reverse osmosis building at the Carlsbad Desalination plant Thursday, May 26, 2022, in Carlsbad, Calif. The facility is the Western hemisphere's largest desalination plant, which removes salt and impurities from ocean water. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
A man performs maintenance work in the reverse osmosis building at the Carlsbad Desalination plant Thursday, May 26, 2022, in Carlsbad, Calif. The facility is the Western hemisphere’s largest desalination plant, which removes salt and impurities from ocean water. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull) 

Desalination

The gist: The Pacific Ocean has more than enough water to supplement whatever the Colorado River has lost. But, as it is, ocean water is not safe to drink, nor can it be used on crops. Running ocean water through a desalination plant can filter out its dangerously high salt content, bacteria and other impurities to make it safe for use.

Could it work? The technology is already in use but no plants in existence can replace the amount of water the Colorado River is losing. Plus, desalination is expensive, time consuming and the waste it produces would create new problems.

Click here to see how desalination could fit in to the West’s strategy to save the Colorado River.


In this photo taken Wednesday, May 27, 2015, Catarina Negrin shows an irrigation system using gray water running through the back yard of her home in Berkeley, Calif. As cities cut back on irrigation and other urban water uses, lawmakers are trying to make gray water systems more common. Gray water is recycled waste water from kitchen appliances, bath tubs, showers and sinks. It flows through discharge pipes into irrigation systems that can keep plants and lawns lush and green, even in a drought. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)
In this photo taken Wednesday, May 27, 2015, Catarina Negrin shows an irrigation system using gray water running through the backyard of her home in Berkeley, Calif. As cities cut back on irrigation and other urban water uses, lawmakers are trying to make gray water systems more common. Gray water is recycled waste water from kitchen appliances, bath tubs, showers and sinks. It flows through discharge pipes into irrigation systems that can keep plants and lawns lush and green, even in a drought. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg) 

Reuse and recycling

The gist: Collect water that’s already been used and use it again.

Could it work? Many cities and states are already using these strategies, though the amount of water that can be recycled and reused is limited by population size and legal constraints.

Click here to see how reuse and recycling could fit in to the West’s strategy to save the Colorado River.


Light shines off the water flowing in a section of the Central Arizona Project on Oct. 24, 2022, near Phoenix, Arizona. The diversion canal diverts water from the Colorado River to support southern Arizona. The flight for aerial photography was provided by LightHawk. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
Light shines off the water flowing in a section of the Central Arizona Project on Oct. 24, 2022, near Phoenix, Arizona. The diversion canal diverts water from the Colorado River to support southern Arizona. The flight for aerial photography was provided by LightHawk. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post) 

Importing water

The gist: If the Colorado River is losing water so fast, why not take water from the places that have it and transport it into the basin that needs it, likely with a system of pipes?

Could it work? Water is already transported all across the country using pipelines and canals. But this is an expensive, time-consuming undertaking that would come with substantial political challenges. In addition, many other regions across the country are suffering droughts as well.

Click here to see how importing water could fit in to the West’s strategy to save the Colorado River.


Experimental nanomaterial is released for the National Center of Meteorology and Seismology during a demonstration cloud seeding flight over in Al Ain, United Arab Emirates, March 3, 2022. As climate change makes the region hotter and drier, the UAE is leading the effort to squeeze more rain out of the clouds, and other countries are rushing to keep up. (Bryan Denton/The New York Times)
Experimental nanomaterial is released for the National Center of Meteorology and Seismology during a demonstration cloud seeding flight over in Al Ain, United Arab Emirates, March 3, 2022. As climate change makes the region hotter and drier, the UAE is leading the effort to squeeze more rain out of the clouds, and other countries are rushing to keep up. (Bryan Denton/The New York Times) 

Cloud seeding

The gist: By spraying a chemical compound — typically silver iodide — into certain types of clouds, seeders can agitate super-chilled water particles inside, causing them to freeze and fall to the ground as snow.

Could it work? The technology is already in use across the West, though the process likely doesn’t create snow or moisture. Instead, it uses moisture that’s already in the air and causes snow to fall in one location rather than another.

Click here to see how cloud seeding could fit in to the West’s strategy to save the Colorado River.


Morning traffic traveling Arizona State Route 101 crosses the Central Arizona Project on Oct. 25, 2022, outside Phoenix, Arizona. The flight for aerial photography was provided by LightHawk.(Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
Morning traffic traveling Arizona State Route 101 crosses the Central Arizona Project on Oct. 25, 2022, outside Phoenix, Arizona. The flight for aerial photography was provided by LightHawk.(Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post) 

Managing growth

The gist: The more people, industries and businesses that call the American West their home, the more water those communities will need. Cities and states can encourage current residents to use less water, especially with aspects like water-dependent lawns. And they can require new homes and businesses to ensure they have a water supply before building.

Could it work? Cities across the West are taking steps to grow responsibly and sustainably. But new laws depend on the political atmosphere of a given city or state and can take time to enact. Plus, cities and businesses only account for a fraction of overall water use.

Click here to see how managing growth could fit in to the West’s strategy to save the Colorado River.


Farmhand Adrian Gonzalez irrigates a field of newly planted alfalfa on Dec. 29, 2022, in Calipatria, California. Gonzalez works for a farm in the Imperial Valley. The valley depends solely on the Colorado River for its surface water supply. The Imperial Valley has rights to more than 1 trillion gallons of Colorado River water each year. The valley's water rights to the Colorado River are as much as Arizona and Nevada put together and twice as much as the rest of the state of California. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
Farmhand Adrian Gonzalez irrigates a field of newly planted alfalfa on Dec. 29, 2022, in Calipatria, California. Gonzalez works for a farm in the Imperial Valley. The valley depends solely on the Colorado River for its surface water supply. The Imperial Valley has rights to more than 1 trillion gallons of Colorado River water each year. The valley’s water rights to the Colorado River are as much as Arizona and Nevada put together and twice as much as the rest of the state of California. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post) 

Agriculture

The gist: State and federal officials could use huge chunks of now-available money to “buy and dry” farmland, farmers could periodically let their fields lay fallow or they can switch to less water-consumptive crops. Likely, the basin needs a combination of all of these combined with efficiency improvements throughout the industry to save water from the irrigating process.

Could it work? Averaging the seven states together, agriculture consumes about 75% of the Colorado River’s water, so the biggest potential savings will likely stem from changes to the industry. Changes would be costly and depend on variables like the types of crops and the region in which they’re being grown. The agriculture industry is also a major employer across the West upon which many other industries depend. Agriculture also provides food across the world, so changes could disrupt the supply and cost of food.

Click here to see how changes to the agriculture industry could fit in to the West’s strategy to save the Colorado River.


Crop circles are seen from the air on Oct. 24, 2022, near Dateland, Arizona. Agriculture in Arizona holds some of the most senior water rights to Colorado River water in the basin. The flight for aerial photography was provided by LightHawk. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
Crop circles are seen from the air on Oct. 24, 2022, near Dateland, Arizona. Agriculture in Arizona holds some of the most senior water rights to Colorado River water in the basin. The flight for aerial photography was provided by LightHawk. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post) 

Demand management

The gist: Pay people not to use water or to use less. Or hike the price of water to encourage less use.

Could it work? Finding ways to reduce demand for water across the Colorado River Basin encompasses many other strategies and has been described as the way of the future. Some aspects only qualify as short-term solutions, though. They must be followed by a long-term strategy.

Click here to see how demand management could fit in to the West’s strategy to save the Colorado River.


Ute Mountain Ute Chairman Manuel Heart stands on land in the Ute Mountain Ute Reservation as clouds hover over the Ute Mountains behind him in Towaoc, Colorado on Oct. 1, 2021. (Photo by Rebecca Slezak/The Denver Post)
Ute Mountain Ute Chairman Manuel Heart stands on land in the Ute Mountain Ute Reservation as clouds hover over the Ute Mountains behind him in Towaoc, Colorado on Oct. 1, 2021. (Photo by Rebecca Slezak/The Denver Post) 

Native American tribes

The gist: By legally cementing the water rights for the tribes depending on the Colorado River, state and federal governments could begin to lease, buy or otherwise compensate the tribes for their water. In addition, this would give the tribes better access to their own water, which they need to drink, farm and develop their communities.

Could it work? State and federal officials must work with Native American tribes to solve the Colorado River’s water crisis. But governments have a poor track record of working with the tribes, sewing generations of mistrust. Many of the tribes remain without clean drinking water and the necessary infrastructure to access what’s rightfully theirs.

Click here to see how working with Native American tribes could fit in to the West’s strategy to save the Colorado River.

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https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/09/colorado-river-water-cuts-crisis-solutions/feed/ 0 8710050 2023-01-09T11:09:35+00:00 2023-01-09T11:59:18+00:00
How can cities across the American West reuse and recycle water to combat drought? https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/06/colorado-river-grey-water-reuse-recycle-drought-solutions/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/06/colorado-river-grey-water-reuse-recycle-drought-solutions/#respond Fri, 06 Jan 2023 18:05:42 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8708023&preview=true&preview_id=8708023 This story is one part of a broader series about ways to save water from the drying Colorado River. See the full project here.

We all use the bathroom, clean our clothes, wash our dishes, take showers or baths, why not collect that water and reuse it? It’s already happening around the world and it’s a technology that’s proven to work.

Water providers can collect what’s called grey water from sinks, bathtubs, showers and laundry machines or even sewage, called blackwater, and treat it for reuse. Fort Collins began allowing grey water systems to be installed in the new buildings this summer and that water can be used to flush toilets or for below-ground irrigation.

Mayor Jeni Arndt said using that water twice, whenever possible, is the responsible thing to do. She acknowledged that the approach might only save a few gallons per home each day but everything counts, plus the approach is a good way to encourage residents to think more sustainably about their water use.

In some cases, the water can be treated and transformed back into drinking water. But it’s even easier to use the water again for non-potable purposes like irrigating crops, watering lawns, recharging groundwater sources and industrial uses, depending on how thoroughly it’s treated.

“It’s a reliable source of water,” Dan Beard, former U.S. Bureau of Reclamation Commissioner, said. “It’s always there. It isn’t subject to drought or other changes. People still flush their toilets.”

Unlike desalination plants, Beard said water treatment plants could be built for much less money and within the span of a year or two. So they’re relatively quick and effective and a wise way to care for the water that’s already in use.

Gary Wockner, head of the nonprofit Save the Colorado, added that Southern California pioneered many ways to reuse water decades ago and called for the upstream states to catch up.

“It’s going to be the future,” Wockner said.

There are limitations, he acknowledged. First among them are complications surrounding water rights and dictating which source of water can be used for which application. Water transported into one river basin from another can typically be used to “extinction,” or captured and reused until it’s gone.

But in other cases, water that has been used once must legally be allowed to drain back into the river’s tributaries to be used by the next person or community downstream.

Plus, Jay Famiglietti, director of the Global Institute for Water Security at the University of Saskatchewan, said there’s only ever going to be so much water available for reuse.

“It’s driven by your supply of human waste,” he said. “That’s as much as you’re going to get.”

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https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/06/colorado-river-grey-water-reuse-recycle-drought-solutions/feed/ 0 8708023 2023-01-06T10:05:42+00:00 2023-01-09T11:18:11+00:00
What part do Native American tribes play in fixing the Colorado River shortage? https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/06/colorado-river-water-rights-native-american-tribes/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/06/colorado-river-water-rights-native-american-tribes/#respond Fri, 06 Jan 2023 15:11:38 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8707879&preview=true&preview_id=8707879 This story is one part of a broader series about ways to save water from the drying Colorado River. See the full project here.

Thirty Native American tribes depend on the Colorado River and collectively they own the rights to as much as 30% of its waters.

Many of those rights amount to “paper water,” however, Manuel Heart, chairman of the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe, said. Meaning, they own the water on paper but don’t have access to it.

Either the rights haven’t been legally quantified and cemented or the water is designated for one use (agriculture, for example) and can’t be used for another (drinking water) or there’s no infrastructure in place to give tribes physical access to it, Heart said.

So much of that water flows downstream, padding the Colorado River’s dangerously low reservoirs and leaving tribes uncompensated for the precious resource.

The scenario is a continuation of the historic inequities forced upon Native Americans by state and federal governments, Heart said. Whatever water his tribe – which spans across Colorado, New Mexico and Utah – has the rights to, pales in comparison to the Ute’s native territories and access.

“Where’s our water right for the land that was taken away from us? How come we just get a drop in the bucket?” Heart said. “The federal government’s still got their thumb on us.”

Heart said he continues to be frustrated by state and federal governments negotiating changes along the Colorado River and all too often the tribes are left out of the conversation. His sentiment was echoed by several other tribal officials during the Colorado River Water Users Association convention in Las Vegas.

Government officials should be doing whatever they can to settle tribal water rights, John Berggren, a water policy analyst for the nonprofit Western Resource Advocates, said. If they can work together, some of those tribal waters could then become a supply stream into the dwindling river.

Say a tribe has the rights to 500,000 acre-feet, Berggren said as an example. If state and federal officials can help cement those rights and help the tribe access its water then “maybe they only need 250,000 acre-feet,” he said.

Tribal officials could use that water to provide much-needed clean drinking water to their people, water their crops and grow their communities. Meanwhile, whatever water the tribe didn’t need could be sold or leased to state or federal governments and used to prop up levels at lakes Powell and Mead.

“It’s a win-win,” Berggren said.

Estevan López, the Upper Colorado River Compact Commissioner for New Mexico, said his state has had success working with the Navajo Nation and the Jicarilla-Apache Tribe, but other negotiations remain in the early stages.

“A decade ago I hadn’t even realized the Ute Mountain Utes had a claim in New Mexico,” he said.

López acknowledged that many tribes lose water downstream and aren’t compensated for it, though they should be. Whatever water the sovereign nations have to spare once their rights are settled would be an asset to the Colorado River system, he said.

But some tribes, like Heart’s, might not have water to spare, instead they need the few dozen acre-feet they have the rights to so they can shore up and grow their communities.

“I want my full allocation,” Heart said. “I want all the water I need for my tribe. Our population is growing, our needs are growing.”

Michael Vicente, irrigation manager, inspects a new center pivot irrigation system in a field of blue corn at the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe Farm and Ranch Enterprise operation at the tribe's 7,000-acre farm south of Towaoc, Colorado, on June, 29 2022. (Photo by Bill Hatcher/Special to The Denver Post)
Michael Vicente, irrigation manager, inspects a new center pivot irrigation system in a field of blue corn at the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe Farm and Ranch Enterprise operation at the tribe’s 7,000-acre farm south of Towaoc, Colorado, on June, 29 2022. (Photo by Bill Hatcher/Special to The Denver Post) 

Shaun Chapoose, chairman of the Ute Indian Tribe in northeast Utah, is in a different position. His tribe has the rights to 500,000 acre-feet, though they haven’t legally been settled. That water has been flowing downstream for years and the tribe hasn’t been compensated for any of it, he said.

Should government officials finally settle the Ute Indian Tribe’s rights, Chapoose said he’d be open to leasing that water back into the system so it could help support the basin.

“I’m not against people using my water, I just don’t think they should be using it for free,” he said.

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https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/06/colorado-river-water-rights-native-american-tribes/feed/ 0 8707879 2023-01-06T07:11:38+00:00 2023-01-09T11:17:29+00:00
Can water managers find ways to lower demand on the Colorado River? https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/06/colorado-river-solutions-water-demand-management/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/06/colorado-river-solutions-water-demand-management/#respond Fri, 06 Jan 2023 13:56:20 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8707826&preview=true&preview_id=8707826 This story is one part of a broader series about ways to save water from the drying Colorado River. See the full project here.

There’s lower case demand management and then there’s upper case Demand Management, an official policy, John Berggren, a water policy analyst for the nonprofit Western Resource Advocates, said.

The former is “the way of the future,” Berggren said. Most of the biggest ways to save Colorado River water, from fallowing fields, changing crops and replacing Kentucky Blue Grass lawns, boil down to demand management in one way or another.

Finding ways of encouraging people, farms and cities to use less water should be the highest priority in the basin, Jay Famiglietti, director of the Global Institute for Water Security at the University of Saskatchewan said.

One approach, he said, would be to create a national water strategy, rather than depending on disparate approaches for different river basins and water sources.

Dan Beard, former U.S. Bureau of Reclamation commissioner, suggested that U.S. Interior Secretary Deb Haaland could raise the price of water to incentivize conservation.

Farmers in California’s Imperial Valley told the Voice of San Diego that for the past decade they’ve consistently paid about $20 per acre-foot of Colorado River water, a fraction of the cost for neighboring farmers. With water so affordable, there’s less reason to conserve the resource.

Higher rates would change that, Beard said.

“That’s the quickest, easiest and, as far as I’m concerned, one of the best solutions,” he said.

If officials do raise the prices of water they should ensure those increased rates don’t fall on those who can least afford it, Famiglietti said.

“You have to make sure families have enough water to do all the things they need to do,” he said.

Bruce Talbott of Talbott Farms clears debris from the path of irrigation water at one of his family's orchards on July 2, 2022, in Palisade, Colorado. Talbott wants to make sure every drop of the irrigation water from the Colorado River is used wisely to nourish the crops. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
Bruce Talbott of Talbott Farms clears debris from the path of irrigation water at one of his family’s orchards on July 2, 2022, in Palisade, Colorado. Talbott wants to make sure every drop of the irrigation water from the Colorado River is used wisely to nourish the crops. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post) 

And there are many other ways to influence the demand for water, Famiglietti said, and government officials should do everything they can in that regard before depending on other projects like pipelines or desalination plants.

“We need to do everything we can on the demand side before we do any of these things,” Famiglietti said.

And then there’s upper-case Demand Management strategy, which is an official approach upper-basin states are considering but haven’t yet enacted, Estevan López, the Upper Colorado River Compact Commissioner for New Mexico, said.

Part of that strategy amounts to paying people not to use their water, which Berggren said is a short-term strategy merely to “prevent the system from crashing.”

The System Conservation Pilot Program, which Congress passed in December, fits into that category. It’s a revival of an effort that ran from 2015 to 2018 and doled out about $8.5 million to volunteers willing to forgo their water use.

The first run of that program saved a little less than 50,000 acre-feet. But now much more money – $125 million – is available thanks to the Inflation Reduction Act.

Colorado’s U.S. Sen. John Hickenlooper, one of the sponsors of a standalone bill to revive the program, said the water savings could be ten times greater than before.

“It’s obviously a first step,” Hickenlooper told The Denver Post in December. “This does not solve the problem.”

Chuck Cullom, executive director of the Upper Colorado River Commission, hedged during a panel discussion in Las Vegas, discussing how he would define success for the program this time around.

“I, quite frankly, don’t have any sense of how many folks are willing and able to participate,” Cullom said. “Success is broad participation, broadly distributed across four states, among water users, municipal, industrial and agricultural.”

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https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/06/colorado-river-solutions-water-demand-management/feed/ 0 8707826 2023-01-06T05:56:20+00:00 2023-01-09T11:16:58+00:00
Can cloud seeding bring more water to the drying Colorado River Basin? https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/06/colorado-river-water-cloud-seeding-snow-utah-colorado-new-mexico/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/06/colorado-river-water-cloud-seeding-snow-utah-colorado-new-mexico/#respond Fri, 06 Jan 2023 12:32:34 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8707774&preview=true&preview_id=8707774 This story is one part of a broader series about ways to save water from the drying Colorado River. See the full project here.

Water experts across the American West often note that alongside the massive lakes and reservoirs humans have built, the region’s greatest way of storing water is its snowpack.

So why not make it snow when and where we can?

That’s the idea behind the decades-old technology of cloud seeding.

Cloud seeders are already working across the American West and there’s no need for them to stop their work, experts say, but the method isn’t a substantive solution to the water shortage in the Colorado River basin.

“It’s so darned hard to quantify the impact,” Estevan López, the Upper Colorado River Compact Commissioner for New Mexico, said.

In short, when the right type of clouds are near, seeders can agitate the super-chilled water inside them with a chemical compound, usually silver iodide. They spread that compound using planes or even machines strategically placed on the ground. The silver iodide then causes the water to freeze and fall to the ground as snow.

Voila! More snow means more water for the Colorado River Basin, right?

Not necessarily.

Cloud seeding doesn’t create storms out of nowhere, it can only enhance existing storms.

More realistically, the extra snow that might fall as a result of cloud seeding is snow that might have fallen farther downwind of the storm, Jay Famiglietti, director of the Global Institute for Water Security at the University of Saskatchewan, said. So seeding isn’t creating snow so much as changing where and when it falls.

The process can only work with the moisture already in the area, Famiglietti said. And “there’s not enough moisture in the air” to make a big enough difference in the basin’s ongoing drought.

Plus, there’s what’s called the “downwinding effect” to consider, Jennifer Gimbel, senior water policy scholar at Colorado State University’s Water Center, said. If more snow is falling in the West because of cloud seeding, then people further east that might have otherwise received that snow could argue that moisture was effectively taken from them. That perception could create a sort of legal liability, she said.

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https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/06/colorado-river-water-cloud-seeding-snow-utah-colorado-new-mexico/feed/ 0 8707774 2023-01-06T04:32:34+00:00 2023-01-09T11:16:23+00:00
How can cities across the West grow to use Colorado River water sustainably? https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/05/colorado-river-water-crisis-population-growth-grass/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/05/colorado-river-water-crisis-population-growth-grass/#respond Thu, 05 Jan 2023 19:15:19 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8707133&preview=true&preview_id=8707133 This story is one part of a broader series about ways to save water from the drying Colorado River. See the full project here.

Water experts from across the country gathered in Las Vegas in December to discuss the water shortage in the Colorado River Basin and during one panel discussion John Entsminger, general manager of the Southern Nevada Water Authority brought up growth.

The basin’s water supply is dwindling but last he checked, Entsminger said Las Vegas is still issuing building permits. So are cities like Denver, Phoenix and Los Angeles.

All of those new people and businesses are going to need water. And it’s not as though cities and states can simply turn people away at their borders.

But there are measures that state and local governments can enact to encourage current residents to save more water. And ways to grow more responsibly.

One place to start is with Kentucky Blue Grass and other types of non-native, water-dependent grasses decorating lawns across the American West. In Colorado, about half of the water used in cities goes towards watering those types of lawns. This year state legislators launched a turf replacement program, which would pay homeowners and business owners to replace their ornamental lawns with plants better suited to the region’s dry climate.

Other cities in the state already have their own turf replacement efforts, like Greeley’s Life after Lawn program. So does Castle Rock, which is also limiting the amount of water-intensive grasses that can be planted in new homes. Aurora passed a similar measure and even included golf courses in the package.

The approach works, too.

Las Vegas started a turf replacement program in 1999, offering residents money (increasing amounts as the years went by) for every square foot of lawn they were willing to replace. To date, the city has replaced hundreds of millions of square feet of turf and saved hundreds of billions of gallons of water.

Los Angeles launched a similar program in 2015, which is estimated to save up to 26 billion gallons of water each year, The Los Angeles Times reported.

This should be the approach all across the West, Jay Famiglietti, director of the Global Institute for Water Security at the University of Saskatchewan said.

“When you’re in the dry part of the world, it should look like the dry part of the world, not lush and green,” he said.

But there’s also a broader approach to managing new growth: requiring developers to show a water source before issuing a building permit.

Arizona has done this for decades. In 1980 state lawmakers passed the Groundwater Management Act, creating areas in which developers and municipal water providers must obtain permits from the state to confirm any new homes would have a 100-year water supply.

Colorado has a similar 100-year rule for new development but some communities are taking it a step (or three) further and requiring new development to show that it has a 300-year water supply. El Paso County was the first in the state to enact that measure in 1986, Adams and Elbert counties followed. Now Arapahoe County, which expects to host as many as 800,000 people by 2050 is considering it too.

These measures and others like them can help the West continue to grow sustainably, Estevan López, the Upper Colorado River Compact Commissioner for New Mexico said.

Major cities like Denver, Las Vegas, Los Angeles and Phoenix have seen success with their conservation efforts and their populations have soared while decreasing their water use either outright or on a per-capita basis.

Lopez said the same is true for Albuquerque and Santa Fe, though both sit in the Rio Grande Basin, and he said governments all across the West must more aggressively adopt a mindset centered around sustainability and enact the policies to match.

“We can’t just assume the water’s gonna be there,” Lopez said.

But new legislation takes time. Arapahoe County’s 300-year-rule proposal is being considered as part of an 18-month study, which launched in December.

And a city or county ordinance often might not be enough, Jennifer Gimbel, senior water policy scholar at Colorado State University’s Water Center noted.

“Developers can just say ‘We’ll just go across the city line and build here,’” Gimbel said. “You almost need a statewide law.”

A man steps out of the ...
A man steps out of the pool at Desert Color, a newly built community surrounding a large beach-like pool, on July 10, 2022, in St. George, Utah. The U.S. Geological Survey shows that in Washington County, where St. George is located, residents use an average of 306 gallons per day. In Phoenix the average per resident is 111 gallons per day. Desert Color advertises that it is sustainable because the water in the lagoon comes from an aquifer with brackish water that must be treated. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post) 

There’s also a limit to the amount of water that can be saved. Cities, counties and businesses only account for a fraction of the total water drawn throughout the basin.

For example, data from the Colorado Department of Natural Resources shows that municipal and commercial water use makes up only 6.6% of the state’s total. The biggest percentage, in every state, goes to agriculture.

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https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/05/colorado-river-water-crisis-population-growth-grass/feed/ 0 8707133 2023-01-05T11:15:19+00:00 2023-01-09T11:15:53+00:00
Agriculture uses more Colorado River water than anything else, how can the industry change? https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/05/colorado-river-agriculture-water-recapture-alfalfa-crops/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/05/colorado-river-agriculture-water-recapture-alfalfa-crops/#respond Thu, 05 Jan 2023 14:26:56 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8706726&preview=true&preview_id=8706726 This story is one part of a broader series about ways to save water from the drying Colorado River. See the full project here.

There’s really no debate, the biggest chunk of water from the Colorado River goes to agriculture, by far. So that’s where the biggest savings are likely to be found.

If changes to the agriculture industry are likely to be the most fruitful way to save water, they’re also apt to be the most complicated and the most costly for governments and for families.

During the Colorado River Water Users Association convention in Las Vegas, “efficiency” constantly floated through conversations about agriculture. In some cases more efficient irrigation practices can produce higher crop yields, Arizona’s Democratic U.S. Sen. Mark Kelly said during the convention.

But not all crops can be irrigated the same way. And changing the process would be heavily dependent on the region, Gimbel said. Crops grown by a farmer on Colorado’s Western Slope, for example, might not absorb all the water used for irrigation. But in that case, the water simply returns to the river and its tributaries.

That sort of recapture isn’t as simple for places like the Imperial or Yuma irrigation districts in California and Arizona, respectively.

Improving irrigation techniques isn’t near enough either, the experts agree. The industry needs broader changes.

One approach is for state and federal officials to buy farmland and stop crop production, Save the Colorado’s Gary Wockner said.

“The only way to save Lake Powell is to buy a million acres of farms and dry them permanently,” he said.

Not only could that cut into the country’s food supply and increase costs for already cost-burdened families, but it would also put people out of work. Farmers leaving the industry would mean fewer customers for support industries in rural communities like mechanics, parts dealers, even barbers, Jennifer Gimbel, senior water policy scholar at Colorado State University’s Water Center, said.

That pain could be lessened if states tap into widely available federal money from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and the Inflation Reduction Act to help those communities transition into new industries rather than allowing them to dry up, John Berggren, a water policy analyst for the nonprofit Western Resource Advocates.

Federal dollars are also available for farmers willing to fallow their fields to save water, Berggren said. But that’s only a short-term solution.

Another way to save water is to stop growing crops that need more water, swapping them out for another crop that uses less.

Alfalfa often bears the brunt of those conversations. The Salt Lake Tribune’s Editorial board recently took aim at the forage crop, grown widely throughout the basin, calling it a greater liability to Utah than a benefit. The crop consumes 68% of Utah’s water allocation and provides only 0.2% of the state’s annual gross domestic product, the paper reported.

And much of the alfalfa grown in the basin is then shipped overseas, effectively exporting Colorado River water. Farmers shipped about $880 million worth of hay to China, Japan and Saudi Arabia, High Country News reported in September.

Stop growing the hay in the basin and grow it somewhere where water is plentiful Berggren said, he suggested the Midwest. Or since much of the crop is used to feed cattle, consuming less dairy as a country and eating less beef would help.

As for exporting the crop to other countries, that’s trickier, Berggren acknowledged.

“It’s a free country and a capitalist country and if you want to sell your product to the highest bidder then by God you have the right to do that,” he said. “It’s hard to single out individual farmers and say ‘You’re selling to China, you’re cut off.’”

But at the minimum state and federal officials should consider the issue and consider whether there’s a way to keep the benefits of Colorado River water within the basin, or at least the country, Berggren said.

The Central Arizona Project crosses farm land on Oct. 25, 2022, near Florence, Arizona. The flight for aerial photography was provided by LightHawk. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
The Central Arizona Project carrying Colorado River water crosses farm land on Oct. 25, 2022, near Florence, Arizona. The flight for aerial photography was provided by LightHawk. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post) 

Farmers can also grow different crops that need less water, Becky Mitchell, director of the Colorado Water Conservation Board, said. She suggested Kernza, among others.

The Family Farm Alliance defended alfalfa in a November report, however, saying it’s a frequent target of those who “rely on simplistic explanations to heap scorn upon growing a forage crop in the West, particularly in times of drought.”

The Alliance pointed out that not only is alfalfa beneficial to the livestock it feeds but its fields also attract insects, songbirds, gophers and ground squirrels, deer and elk, among others. The crop adds nitrogen to its soils rather than taking it out and its roots protect land from erosion.

Water demand for alfalfa is high, the Alliance noted, but that’s because of its high yield and lengthy growth pattern resulting in multiple harvests.

Mitchell noted that farmers in the southwest can harvest the crop 11 times a year or more. Fewer “cuttings” could save water, she said, nodding to the upstream states, which consume far less water each year (and also have substantially lower populations and shorter growing seasons).

“We don’t have 11 cuttings of anything in the Upper Basin,” Mitchell said. “That might be why our numbers are the way they are.”

Regardless, Mitchell acknowledged that none of the changes needed for the agricultural industry are easy and many of them would have widespread consequences. Still, she said, they’re necessary.

“Somebody has to start it,” she said.

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https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/05/colorado-river-agriculture-water-recapture-alfalfa-crops/feed/ 0 8706726 2023-01-05T06:26:56+00:00 2023-01-09T11:15:24+00:00
Why can’t the West just pipe in water from the Mississippi or Missouri rivers to save the Colorado River? https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/04/colorado-river-water-pipeline-import-mississippi-missouri/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/04/colorado-river-water-pipeline-import-mississippi-missouri/#respond Wed, 04 Jan 2023 14:10:10 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8705453&preview=true&preview_id=8705453 This story is one part of a broader series about ways to save water from the drying Colorado River. See the full project here.

Engineers and water experts knew for decades that growth in the Colorado River Basin would eventually hit a tipping point. That is, unless the states depending on the river found a new source of water.

One way to do that, civil engineer Royce J. Tipton wrote in 1965, would be to pipe water in from somewhere else, also referred to as “importing” water. One scheme considered in the 50s and 60s (but never developed), the North American Water and Power Alliance, proposed to pipe water from rivers in Alaska and Canada south into the Colorado River’s headwaters, among other places.

Water transfers like this are already in use across the world and have been for millennia (think of the Roman aqueducts). An example in the Colorado River Basin would be the Central Arizona Project, a canal system transporting river water across hundreds of miles of desert and into the heart of Arizona for cities like Phoenix and Tucson.

The Southern Delivery System in the nearby Arkansas River Basin pipes water from Pueblo County more than 60 miles north to Colorado Springs, Fountain and Security.

These canals and pipelines are expensive to build, though, and take years. The Southern Delivery System, for example, cost an estimated $985 million and took about four years to build (the planning phase took much longer than that). And during construction, the process became mired in local and federal permitting processes.

A decade ago, states in the Colorado River Basin wrapped up a three-year study, which considered piping water to Denver – and beyond – from the Missouri River. Then- U.S. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar dismissed the idea as politically and technically infeasible.

“At one time they talked about hauling icebergs down from Alaska,” Jennifer Gimbel, senior water policy scholar at Colorado State University’s Water Center, said.

Piping water from the Midwest and up a vertical mile would present an engineering challenge to say the least, Beard said. But aside from that, working with private, local, state and federal landowners would spark decades of litigation and permitting processes.

“It shouldn’t even be under consideration,” Dan Beard, former U.S. Bureau of Reclamation commissioner, said.

Gary Wockner, head of the nonprofit Save the Colorado, was less concerned about the technical possibilities and more concerned about one dry region taking water from another place.

“You’re robbing Peter to pay Paul,” Wockner said.

Not to mention in the Midwest, the Missouri and Mississippi rivers are experiencing droughts of their own, as have the Columbia, Klamath and Snake rivers in the Pacific Northwest.

Or there are legal protections in place that would prevent states in the Colorado River Basin from looking elsewhere. Like with the Great Lakes, which hold an estimated 90% of North America’s fresh surface water, a 2008 compact prohibits communities from even applying to divert water unless they’re at least partially within the basin.

“It’d be a political war wherever you took the water from, for sure,” Wockner said.

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https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/04/colorado-river-water-pipeline-import-mississippi-missouri/feed/ 0 8705453 2023-01-04T06:10:10+00:00 2023-01-09T11:14:04+00:00
Could desalinated ocean water be used to fix the dwindling Colorado River? https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/04/colorado-river-desalination-ocean-water-drought-solutions/ https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/04/colorado-river-desalination-ocean-water-drought-solutions/#respond Wed, 04 Jan 2023 13:37:23 +0000 https://www.eastbaytimes.com/?p=8705432&preview=true&preview_id=8705432 This story is one part of a broader series about ways to save water from the drying Colorado River. See the full project here.

Desalination plants are already in use all over the world, drawing in ocean water and filtering out its dangerously high salt content, bacteria and other impurities to make it safe for use.

A dozen are in use in California, alongside more in Arizona, Mexico and other areas dotting North America.

One in Australia, the Victorian Desalination Plant, can provide up to a third of Melbourne’s water supply, according to the city’s water provider. And Israel is being hailed as a leader in the field with five desalination plants along its coasts providing tap water for nearly 9.2 million people.

But there are quite a few catches to the strategy.

First, Israel’s success with desalination wouldn’t translate the same way for the Colorado River Basin, according to Jay Famiglietti, director of the Global Institute for Water Security at the University of Saskatchewan. More than four times as many people depend on the Colorado River and, even then, human water consumption pales in comparison to the amount of water needed for agriculture in the basin, which feeds people across the world.

Agriculture only accounts for a small fraction of Israel’s economy.

Desalination can’t match the vast quantities of water the Colorado River provides, especially in a few short years, Dan Beard, a retired U.S. Bureau of Reclamation Commissioner told The Denver Post. And building a massive desalination plant could take up to a decade.

“This would be a long-term challenge,” Beard said. “You couldn’t just flip a switch and start a desalting plant.”

Desalinating water also requires huge amounts of energy, Beard said. Not only are the plants costly to run but that, in turn, makes the water they produce expensive as well.

One multi-billion-dollar proposal from Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey would build a desalination plant that could take water out of the Gulf of California and transform it into 200,000 acre-feet of usable water a year, but at an estimated price of $2,000 per acre-foot, a rate about ten times higher than current costs in the area.

Running the plant would cost tens of millions of dollars each year as well, KUNC reported.

“It works, but it’s expensive,” Beard said.

After all that, the desalination process has to do something with the byproduct of the filtration process, called brine, Famiglietti said. Wherever that brine is dumped will inevitably be damaged by its high salt content, potentially ruining entire ecosystems.

That environmental hazard alone could wreak havoc up and down the West Coast, Famiglietti said. But then if the brine begins slipping down toward Mexican waters, it could even create an international incident.

Desalination, like many of the other ideas, has a part to play in replacing some of the water lost by the Colorado River, Becky Mitchell, director of the Colorado Water Conservation Board, said. But it’s not a “silver bullet” solution.

“We have to consider all of the creative solutions and temper our expectations,” Mitchell said.

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https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/01/04/colorado-river-desalination-ocean-water-drought-solutions/feed/ 0 8705432 2023-01-04T05:37:23+00:00 2023-01-09T11:13:18+00:00