West Laid Plans

Western states and feds agree to new pact on Colorado River drought rules 2

The seven states served by the Colorado River agreed with federal officials last week on new rules for how to manage the river's all-important water in times of drought. The agreement stipulates through 2026 what water levels must be maintained in the region's two main reservoirs, Lake Mead and Lake Powell, triggering conservation measures when levels dip below the line. Water in the U.S. West has been an exceedingly controversial issue for decades but its importance has only increased as the region continues to endure a record eight-year drought and most climate-change forecasts predict an even worse situation for future water supplies. The new agreement also lets the Las Vegas area use more Colorado River water in exchange for financing a reservoir project in California that would capture some of the river's water destined for Mexico for use in the state. Many environmentalists are skeptical of the overall river plan. "There is more water on paper than there actually is on the landscape," said John Weisheit of green group Living Rivers. "They are looking at this in a way that will allow more development even though the water is not theoretically there."

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  1. Tasermons Partner Posted 2:50 am
    11 Dec 2007

    And what does Mexico think......of this plan to divert even more water from a river system that barely even reaches their territory anymore thanks to U.S. consumption?
    Let me guess, they weren't informed?
  2. Growthbuster Posted 12:21 am
    18 Dec 2007

    DenialAs long as our policy-makers don't have the vision and courage to recognize and admit we have exceeded our limits in the West (not to mention the planet!), we'll keep trying to shift water rights, dam another river (can you believe that is actually on the table?), kill agriculture, and somehow believe low-flow toilets will allow us to continue our worship of growth everlasting.

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