By Eric
Holthaus on May 2, 2018
Lake Mead is the country’s
biggest reservoir of water. Think of it as the savings account for the entire
Southwest. Right now, that savings account is nearly overdrawn.
For generations, we’ve been
using too much of the Colorado River, the 300-foot-wide ribbon of water that
carved the Grand Canyon, supplies Lake Mead, and serves as the main water
source for much of the American West.
The river sustains one in
eight Americans — about 40 million people — and millions of acres of farmland.
In the next 40 years, the region is expected to add at
least 10 million more people, as the region’s rainfall becomes more
erratic.
An especially
dismal snowpack this past winter has forced a long-simmering dispute
over water rights to the fore, one that splits people living above and below
Lake Mead.
It’s a messy, confusing
situation, so here’s an overview of who’s involved and what’s at stake:
Users of Colorado River water
below Lake Mead — including the cities of Phoenix, Los Angeles, Las Vegas (collectively referred to
as the “lower basin”) — rely on the reservoir as a lifeline. The people in
the lower basin exist partly at the mercy of what happens in the upper basin,
an area encompassing the snowcapped peaks of Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, and
northern New Mexico, the source region of the river.
Big water users in the upper
basin — Salt Lake City, Denver, Albuquerque, among others — are also getting
nervous because snowpack in the Rockies has been dwindling, and there’s
no physical way for them to store the water they depend on. There are no
big reservoirs in the Rockies.
In recent weeks, tensions
are rising after states in the upper basin sent a strongly worded
letter to one of the river’s biggest users, the Central Arizona Water
Conservation District, or CAWCD, which supplies water to Tucson and Phoenix.
The upper basin states accused
the utility of manipulating the complex system that governs Lake Mead
in order to get more water. The Arizona utility denied the charges.
An upper basin city — Pueblo,
Colorado — then pulled
out of a regional conservation program, further threatening the spirit of
long-term cooperation throughout the Colorado River basin. Denver has threatened
to do the same. The quick escalation shows just how fragile the system
really is.
In an email to Grist, Kathryn
Sorensen, director of Phoenix’s Water Services Department, says the city “does
not and has never supported CAWCD’s attempt to draw additional water” from the
Colorado River. She said that the only way forward “is through collaboration
among all stakeholders in the basin.”
The whole thing feels like the
beginnings of a water war fought with cryptic, wonky
tweets. As longtime Western water journalists Luke Runyon and Bret
Jaspers recently
wrote, “public shaming is how water managers police themselves.”
What’s happening could be seen
as the slow death of an era of easy living, the unwinding of a nearly 100-year-old
series of multi-state compacts (collectively called “The Law of the
River”) that’s been widely viewed as too permissive. Over-reliance on the
Colorado River has helped pave the way for rapid population growth across the
region, from Southern California to Denver, which may now, ironically, begin to
pose a threat to those same cities.
For many reasons, Arizona
is last in line for the Colorado River’s water, and the state is
already preparing for the mandatory restrictions that could be less than two
years away. The latest
official projections from the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, the federal
agency that manages the Colorado River system, shows that Lake Mead is likely
to dip below the critical threshold of 1,075 feet above sea level late next
year. That could trigger the first official “call on the river” — a legally-mandated
cutback for certain users aimed at avoiding an all-out free-for-all.
In Phoenix, a
worst-case scenario is now looking more and more likely. In just a few
years from now, if (or, when) Lake Mead dips below 1,075 feet, the city may
find itself in a position where it stops building new subdivisions, the state’s
agricultural economy comes crashing to a permanent halt, and a fit of
well-drilling begins to deplete the local groundwater.
And then there’s always
climate change. On the world’s current emissions trajectory, sharply warming
temperatures boost the odds of a megadrought in the Southwest sometime later this
century to
more than 99 percent. Such a drought would last a generation. Nearly all
trees in the Southwest could die. The scale of the disaster would have the
power to reshape the course of U.S. history.
For now, the spat over the
Colorado River offers a glimpse into water politics in an era of permanent
scarcity. The low snowpack in the upper basin states means that inflows into
Lake Mead will be just 43
percent of normal this year, raising the stakes for conservation
programs throughout the West. In the midst of long-running drought, 2017
was the most successful year for water conservation in decades — which
is evidence that when there’s less water around, people can make things work.
“We must all find a way to
collectively use less water while respecting the Law of the River,”Sorensen
says. “That’s of course a tricky proposition because the Law of the River is
basically the most complex governance structure ever created by human beings.”
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