In Salt Lake City last week, the
BLM announced that the amount of water released from Lake Powell in water year 2014 (starting in October) will be reduced by 9%. The volume of water released each year is based on
guidelines set in 2007 by the Secretary of Interior, which coordinate the management of large reservoirs along the Colorado River, including Lake Powell and Lake Mead. According to the guidelines, "A
Shortage Condition exists when the Secretary determines that insufficient mainstream water is available to satisfy 7.5 maf [million acre feet] of annual consumptive use in the Lower Division states." This certainly applies today, and the release from Lake Powell will be 7.48 maf, the lowest release since Glen Canyon Dam was constructed in the 1960s. The BLM projects that Lake Mead levels will decline an additional
eight feet next year as a result of the reduced release from Lake Powell.
Upper Colorado Regional Director Larry Walkoviak said in a statement, "This is the worst 14-year drought period in the last hundred years."
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photo credit: Glen Canyon National Recreation Area |
Although the immediate effect on Colorado River water rights holders is small for now, shortages like this are predicted to become
more frequent because of changing climate conditions. As Erik Stokstad reports in
Science Insider, more water has been promised to users than can be delivered.