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New Projects On Colorado River Keep Coming Despite Water Shortage

The Bureau of Reclamation recently declared a water shortage on the Colorado River, but that hasn’t stopped states from proposing new water projects.

Just about every drop on the Colorado River is accounted for. But climate change has reduced the amount of water in the system. 

Gary Wockner is with Save the Colorado, a conservation group that is tracking new projects. 

“In total, the projects are proposing to divert about a new 400,000 acre-feet of water, which is a huge amount of water that they’re proposing to take out of the Colorado River, before it even gets to Lake Powell,” Wockner said. 

He says his group has counted more than 20 proposals on the drawing board, including major pipelines and dams. Most of them are in the Upper Basin. 

“There’s a kind of posturing, and I think more of the posturing goes on in the Upper Basin than the Lower Basin cause the Lower Basin again has the senior right, and the Upper Basin is saying oh, we wanna get along and we wanna collaborate and we wanna to all this, at the same time they’re trying to get as much water out of the river as possible,” Wockner said. 

The legal agreement that governs use of the Colorado River expires in five years.

Ron Dungan was a senior field correspondent at KJZZ from 2020 to 2024.