Wyoming
Related: About this forumAs water shortages loom, Wyoming seeks water-bank bill
Worried by growing demands and shrinking water supplies in the Colorado River Basin, Wyoming lawmakers are seeking legislation to authorize water banking in Wyoming and declare it a beneficial use.
The proposed changes to water law could allow Wyoming to bank Green River water for the purpose of meeting obligations to downstream states, and in doing so keep the states water users from running dry in the event of a shortage.
Lawmakers on two legislative committees were briefed recently of looming disruption in the Colorado River Basin due to drought and growing demand. The 1922 Colorado River Compact that determines how the basins water is divided among seven western states and Mexico is based on overly rosy assumptions of flows. With Lake Powell at 43 percent of capacity and falling, water managers are nervous.
They fear cascading events that could limit water use, curtail power generation, reduce critical electricity revenue and jeopardize endangered species in the region where 40 million people depend on Colorado River Basin water. Flows into Lake Powell in 2018 are expected to be 51 percent of normal and a structural deficit is causing Lake Mead to fall at a rate of about 12 feet a year.
Read more: https://www.wyofile.com/as-water-shortages-loom-wyo-seeks-water-bank-bill/
elleng
(137,259 posts)California gets the lions share of the water (for agriculture.)
If only it could be exported from Houston.
lapfog_1
(30,285 posts)well, at least the inter mountain west.
The water fights are going to be intense. Las Vegas and Phoenix and Los Angeles (not to mention the farmers and Mexico) may all evaporate and go away some day.
pbmus
(12,444 posts)Salt water desalination plant yearly for at least the next 10 yrs...