The
unprecedented water crisis of the American Southwest
A
prolonged drought has sapped the once-vigorous Colorado River,
threatening the water supply of millions
1
February, 2014
Why
is the Colorado so important?
It's
the lifeline of the arid Southwest. Starting off in the snowy Rocky
Mountains of northern Colorado, the 1,450-mile river snakes its way
through the Grand Canyon and southwest toward Mexico, supplying water
to seven states — California, Nevada, Arizona, Utah, Colorado, New
Mexico, and Wyoming. The river and its tributaries provide water for
40 million people in hot, thirsty cities such as Los Angeles, Las
Vegas, San Diego, and Phoenix, while irrigating 4 million acres of
farmland stretching from California's Imperial Valley to Wyoming's
cattle herds. But with the Colorado's flow now reduced to a muddy
trickle in parts, millions in the Southwest face the grave prospect
of acute, permanent water shortages. The river "is a testament
of what happens when we ask too much of a limited resource,"
said PBS filmmaker Peter McBride. "It disappears."
What's
causing the problem?
The
most immediate cause is 14 years of drought unrivaled in 1,250 years.
Low snowpack in the Rocky Mountains has diminished the river at its
source, while soaring summer temperatures over 110 degrees have
evaporated its waters, depleted its reservoirs, and dried out huge
swaths of soil — crippling farmers in the process. "I've got
corn plants that are as brown as you could imagine," said Weld
County, Colo., farmer Dave Eckhardt last summer, after losing more
than 400 acres of his 1,400-acre crop. Colorado's supply crisis has
been exacerbated by a demand problem: Millions of Americans have
flocked to the Sun Belt to enjoy warmer temperatures, and have dug
swimming pools and planted grass lawns that really don't belong in
desert climates.
How
bad is the water shortage?
It's
severe. Authorities are now reducing the flow from Colorado's two
parched reservoirs: Lake Powell, which supplies the upper Colorado
basin, and Lake Mead, which supplies Los Angeles and Las Vegas. For
the first time in the river's history, the amount of water flowing
from Powell to Mead will this year be reduced by 750,000 acre-feet —
enough to supply about 1.5 million homes. Officials say the reduction
is necessary, given that Powell is at almost half its capacity. With
Mead's levels just as low, officials in Nevada and other states are
predicting an unprecedented water crisis. If Mead were to drop below
1,000 feet above sea level — it's currently at 1,106 feet — the
lake would sink below the intake of the massive pipe that feeds water
to several states. That means not just brown lawns and dry gardens,
but stunted crops and higher food prices nationally. Those threats
have sent Nevada and others scrambling to adapt.
What
can they possibly do?
Quite
a lot, actually. Arizona farmers have started using laser technology
to keep their fields table flat and reduce runoff. The state now
consumes as much water as it did in 1955, even though the population
was then one twelfth what it is now. In southern Nevada, almost all
water used indoors by the 40 million tourists who visit Las Vegas
each year is recycled and returned to Lake Mead, and officials now
claim that everyone could take a 20-minute shower every day and the
city's water consumption wouldn't increase a single drop. Nevada is
also digging a new, deeper inflow pipe from Lake Mead. San Diego,
meanwhile, is attempting to build an expensive desalination plant so
residents can start drinking the Pacific Ocean. But in the long run,
none of these responses may suffice.
Why
is that?
Climate
experts believe the drought is a prelude to a new, drier era in which
the river's flow is permanently diminished. "We can't depend on
history to project the future anymore," said Carly Jerla, a
geological hydrologist who closely monitors the Colorado. The river's
wet 20th century may have been an anomaly; in the 13 centuries before
the 1900s, its flow was actually 15 percent lower. The current
drought may also be the product of a wider pattern of climate change,
signifying a barren future: Several global-warming studies predict
that rising temperatures will reduce the river's flow by up to 35
percent by 2050.
What
will a drier future be like?
The
states will have to make some grim compromises. California has
subsidized the Central Arizona Project — an irrigation system of
canals — in exchange for priority status during a drought. If water
rationing begins in 2015, as predicted, Arizona will therefore have
to bear the brunt of reductions — effectively killing agriculture
as "an industry in central Arizona," according to the
project's manager. Arizona is not likely to stand for such farming
suicide. But California is determined to hold on to its full
allotment of water, especially with its population projected to rise
by 6 million by midcentury. With 15 percent of the nation's food
produced on the region's Colorado-fed farmland, the struggle over
resources will have national consequences, says Brad Udall, a
director at the University of Colorado Law School. Southwesterners,
he says, will "have to answer some very difficult questions,"
including whether farms are less important than cities. Someday,
states may even have to start turning away new residents.
A
river that doesn't reach the sea
For
6 million years, the Colorado River flowed southwest from the snowy
Rocky Mountains to a sodden, 2-million-acre-wide delta in Mexico,
finally emptying its 14 million acre-feet of freshwater into the Sea
of Cortez. But in 1998, the river stopped reaching the sea. Its
waters had been so depleted from constant diversion and damming that
none remained to flow into the sea. Today, the delta is a "dry
river cemetery," a barren moonscape dotted with abandoned boats,
says Peter McBride, who made a PBS film about the river. While
American states have desperately fought over the Colorado's
resources, McBride says, they've totally disregarded how the water
fight affects more than 3 million people in Mexico who also depend on
it. "If the river ended in San Diego," he says, "I
guarantee it wouldn't run dry."
Editor's
note: This article originally misstated the size of California's
population. It has since been corrected. We regret the error.
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