Under the Colorado River Compact, first established in 1922, usage of the Colorado River's waters is divided among seven U.S. states (Arizona, California, Colorado, New Mexico, Nevada, Utah and Wyoming) and Mexico. When the compact was renegotiated last year, the U.S. and Mexico extended a previous agreement that both countries will cut back on water use if the river runs low. This proposal fleshes out how those cutbacks will be implemented.
Water state managers have been meeting since July to hammer out the details of the Drought Contingency Plan. Arizona is still working on intrastate negotiations about how the water cutbacks will be spread among cities, farms and tribes, but federal officials hope to have an overall deal finished by the Colorado River Water Users Association's annual conference in mid-December, James reports.
Once the Lower Basin states sign the proposed agreement, Mexico will be obliged to create its own plan to help increase water levels in Lake Mead, which is now 38 percent full. The plans may need to be put to use soon. "Federal officials have said the region will narrowly escape a shortage in 2019 but that a shortage may be declared in 2020," James reports. And Ted Kowalski of the Walton Family Foundation's Colorado River Initiative, noted that "2018 has been one of the river’s driest years on record, and combined storage levels in Lake Powell and Lake Mead are at their lowest point in roughly 50 years."
from The Rural Blog https://ift.tt/2RE8CMG Proposed drought contingency plans released for Colorado River usage - Entrepreneur Generations
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