Southwestern states face further water-usage cuts
During a U.S. Senate hearing on Western drought in the middle of June 2022 the commissioner for the Bureau of Reclamation told the seven states that they have 60 days to make an emergency plan to stop using 2 to 4 million acre-feet of water in the next year. If they don’t, the agency will use its emergency authority to make the cuts itself.
With the pressure on, the seven states are collaborating to develop solutions, including negotiating a post-2026 river operations agreement. The request for input on the post-2026 strategies was released by the Bureau of Reclamation in late June 2022. Input is sought on processes that can be employed to encourage and facilitate participation of Colorado River Basin partners, stakeholders, and the public as well as likely elements and strategies for post-2026 operations to consider in the anticipated upcoming processes. Comments close on September 1, 2022.
Arizona actions
Arizona acted after the Senate hearing and release of the comment request for the post-2026 strategies. On July 6, 2022, Governor Doug Ducey signed legislation to invest $1 billion to secure the future of Arizona’s water. Specifically, the funding will go toward importing water into Arizona, conservation, efficiency and reuses, and updated technologies. Governor Ducey believes the water package will have a large effect on growing business and development in Arizona. All of this in turn should help lower Arizona’s water use from the Colorado River.
Previous cuts
As of August 22, 2021, Lake Mead was filled to only 35 percent of its capacity, Lake Powell was 31 percent, and the Lower Colorado system was 40 percent. Due to this, water allocations were already cut for 2022. Nevada was cut by 21,000 acre-feet or roughly 7 percent. Arizona faced the greatest cut at 512,000 fewer acre-feet or about 18 percent of the state’s annual apportionment and 8 percent of the state’s total water use. But even with these past cuts, the issue clearly persists.
There are many changes on the horizon for the seven states getting water from the Colorado River, but will it be enough? If states are unable to significantly decrease their water usage, massive Bureau of Reclamation cuts could majorly impact your business if you are in one of these Southwestern states.
States that get water from the Colorado River face further water usage cuts. And thus, so do the companies within those states. The states must collaborate quickly to counter ongoing water shortages. The Colorado River supplies water to seven states: Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming, Arizona, California, and Nevada. Water from the river goes out to almost 40 million people. These seven states continue to face severe drought and shrinking water availability. The Colorado River feeds Lake Mead and Lake Powell, which are also very low.