Imperial Valley Press

Western states chart diverging paths as water shortages loom

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SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — As persistent drought and climate change threaten the Colorado River, several states that rely on the water acknowledg­e they likely won’t get what they were promised a century ago.

But not Utah. Republican lawmakers approved an entity that could push for more of Utah’s share of water as seven Western states prepare to negotiate how to sustain a river serving 40 million people. Critics say the legislatio­n, which the governor still must sign, could strengthen Utah’s effort to complete a billion-dollar pipeline from a dwindling reservoir that’s a key indicator of the river’s health.

Other states have had similar entities for decades, but Utah’s timing raised questions about its commitment to conservati­on and finding a more equitable way of surviving with less.

“There’s a massive disconnect all centered around climate change,” said Zach Frankel, executive director of the Utah Rivers Council, which opposed the legislatio­n. “The other six basin states know the Colorado River is dropping, and they know they have to decrease their usage, while Utah is running around in this fantasy.”

The river supplies Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming and Mexico as well as a $5 billion-ayear agricultur­al industry.

As the states face a dire environmen­tal future and negotiatio­ns over a new plan to protect the waterway from drought, it’s forced a shift in thinking.

The goal of renegotiat­ing is figuring out how to use less, “not staking out political turf to try to figure out how to use more,” said John Fleck, director of University of New Mexico’s Water Resources Program.

“It’s just not clear Utah has a willingnes­s to do that,” he said.

The six members of the Colorado River Authority of Utah would oversee the state’s negotiatio­ns on the drought plan and other rules that expire in 2026. Opponents worry parts of the legislatio­n would allow the authority to avoid scrutiny by keeping some documents secret and permitting closed meetings.

House Speaker Brad Wilson said Utah will pursue conservati­on, but that alone won’t meet the needs of one of the nation’s fastest-growing states. Utah is entitled to the water under longstandi­ng agreements among the states.

“We just need to make sure that as we kind of preserve and protect our interests in the Colorado River, that we have the expertise and the tools we need at our disposal to do that,” Wilson said.

The bill comes six months after the other states rebuked Utah’s plan to build an undergroun­d pipeline that would transport billions of gallons of water 140 miles (225 kilometers) from Lake Powell to a region near St. George, Utah, close to the Arizona border.

Utah began pursuing the pipeline 15 years ago to serve the city that’s seen a 23% population jump since 2010, according to census figures, likely driven by a warm climate, red rock landscape and outdoor recreation. The project is under federal review.

Water experts worry Utah, which experience­d its driest year ever in 2020, is banking on water that might not be available and could further deplete Lake Powell. Utah is one of the so-called upper basin states that get their share of water based on percentage­s of what’s available but historical­ly haven’t used it all. The lower basin states — Arizona, California and Nevada — get specific amounts that are subject to cuts.

Utah plans to tap 400,000 acre-feet of water on top of the 1 million acre-feet it typically uses. An acre-foot is enough to serve one to two average households a year.

“Using more out of the Colorado River system might be on some piece of paper somewhere as a legal entitlemen­t, but it is not a practical reality in the system that we’ve got today,” said James Eklund, former director of the Upper Colorado River Commission, an interstate agency that helps states administer water rights.

With conservati­on in mind, states have passed laws focused on safeguardi­ng other water supplies.

In Arizona, Gov. Doug Ducey recently signed a bill allowing farmers, ranchers and others to file a conservati­on plan and not lose their full water entitlemen­ts. Colorado and New Mexico also have eased up on “use it or lose it” laws.

The Arizona law doesn’t affect the Colorado River but could boost water in other streams and rivers for wildlife habitat, recreation or city use.

“Everyone in the state needs to take a good, long look at the water that they’re using and how much water they expect to use in the future and how to properly manage that so we can have long-term water security for everybody,” said Kim Mitchell of Western Resource Advocates, which supported the Arizona bill.

Utah isn’t alone in a history of lawsuits, disagreeme­nts and posturing to defend its share of water, though much of it recently has come from lower basin states that use most of their water.

The Imperial Irrigation District in Southern California, which holds the single largest share of Colorado River water, refused to join the drought plan without federal money to address a briny inland sea that’s become a health hazard as evaporatio­n leaves behind contaminat­ed dust. The Salton Sea also will be a sticking point in renegotiat­ions, the district said.

 ?? AP Photo/Richard Vogel ?? This 2019 file photo, shows a bathtub ring of light minerals showing the high water mark of the reservoir which has shrunk to its lowest point on the Colorado River, as seen from the Hoover Dam, Ariz.
AP Photo/Richard Vogel This 2019 file photo, shows a bathtub ring of light minerals showing the high water mark of the reservoir which has shrunk to its lowest point on the Colorado River, as seen from the Hoover Dam, Ariz.

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