Lake Mead, Nation’s Largest Reservoir, To Reach Record Low This Week
With a bathtub ring marking the high water line, a recreational boat approaches Hoover Dam as it makes its way along Black Canyon on Lake Mead, Tuesday, April 16, 2013, near Boulder City, Nev.
CREDIT: AP/ JULIE JACOBSON
7
July, 2014
The
last time Lake Mead, the largest reservoir in the United States,
reached maximum capacity was 1983. This week the lake, located along
the Colorado River near Las Vegas, Nevada, is expected
to reach
a new milestone — its lowest point ever.
Formed
by the Hoover Dam, Lake Mead has been suffering for years as an
expansive
drought
across the West, coupled with rising temperatures and populations,
has overstressed the massive man-made body of water. According to
forecasts
from the federal Bureau of Reclamation, water levels will
fall
this week to their lowest since it was first filled in 1937. The
lake, which provides water for 20 million people across the Southwest
has been losing water for over a decade and is currently at about
40 percent capacity.
Christie
Vanover with the Lake Mead National Recreation Area confirmed with
ThinkProgress that the lake is projected to drop below the record low
of 1081.82 feet this week, probably on Wednesday. She said the lake
will be extending boat ramps to reach the lower levels.
The
Bureau of Reclamation published
a projection in June showing Lake Mead’s water level falling to
1,064 feet by May 2016.
Nearby
Las Vegas gets 90 percent of its water from the lake. With one of the
city’s two intake pipes at risk of being exposed, the city is hard
at work drilling an expensive three-mile-long tunnel to access deeper
reserves.
Bronson
Mack with the Las Vegas Valley Water District told ThinkProgress that
the third intake tunnel is about 70 percent complete and will be
completed sometime next year.
“As
lake levels continue to drop as we’ve seen over the past 14 years,
the threat of the lake dropping below one of the existing intakes
could have impacted about half our capacity,” he said.
Mack
said the city has also focused on conservation efforts, including
their most successful measure of encouraging residents to remove
grass and replace it with water-efficient landscaping. He said this
has resulted in the removal of 160 million square feet of grass from
the valley.
The
dropping water levels, at up to two feet per month, are not only
impacting recreation and water supply for millions, including
California’s already parched agricultural industry, but also
putting hydropower in jeopardy. With less pressure as the water
enters turbines that run the electricity generators, the current
capacity is about 1,592 MW — down from the 2,074 MW that’s
achievable. This could drop to about
1,120 MW by May 2016 if predictions hold.
A
2007 shortage-sharing agreement sets three elevations for which water
restrictions will be imposed on the Lower Basin states of Arizona,
California, Nevada, and New Mexico. The first shortage level, 1,075
feet, will likely come into effect in the next year or two. It would
require a total water use cut of 4.4 percent, with Arizona taking an
11 percent cut, Nevada a four percent cut, New Mexico 3.3 percent and
California remaining the same.
As
climate change renders the Southwest hotter
and drier
and the population of cities across the region continues to swell,
dated water laws dictate the future of one of the most vulnerable
regions in the country. At stake are major portions of the nation’s
agricultural sector, priceless environmental treasures, and the water
supply of millions of people.
“Nineteenth
century water law is meeting 20th century infrastructure and 21st
century climate change,” Bradley Udall, a senior fellow at the
University of Colorado Law School, told
the Los Angeles Times, “and it leads to a nonsensical outcome.”
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