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A ring of bleached sandstone caused by low water levels during a six-year drought surrounds Lake Powell, a Colorado River reservoir near Page, Arizona. Photo: David McNew/Getty Images |
An amendment to a standing
water treaty between the United States and Mexico has received publicity over
the past six months as an example of progress in water sharing agreements. But
the amendment, called Minute 319, is simply a glimpse into ongoing
mismanagement of the Colorado River on the U.S. side of the border.
Over-allocation of the river's waters 90 years ago combined with increasing
populations and economic growth in the river basin have created circumstances
in which conservation efforts -- no matter how organized -- could be too little
to overcome the projected water deficit that the Colorado River Basin will face
in the next 20 years.
Analysis
In 1922, the seven U.S. states
in the Colorado River Basin established a compact to distribute the resources
of the river. A border between the Upper and Lower basins was defined at Lees
Ferry, Ariz. The Upper Basin (Wyoming, Colorado, Utah and New Mexico) was
allocated 9.25 billion cubic meters a year, and the Lower Basin (Arizona,
California and Nevada) was allotted 10.45 billion cubic meters. Mexico was
allowed an unspecified amount, which in 1944 was defined as 1.85 billion cubic
meters a year. The Upper and Lower basins -- managed as separate organizations
under the supervision of the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation -- divided their
allocated water among the states in their jurisdictions. Numerous disputes
arose, especially in the Lower Basin, regarding proper division of the water
resources. But the use of (and disputes over) the Colorado River began long
before these treaties.
As the United States'
territory expanded to the west, the Colorado River briefly was considered a
portal to the isolated frontier of the southwestern United States, since it was
often cheaper to take a longer path via water to transport goods and people in
the early 19th century. There was a short-lived effort to develop the Colorado
River as the "Mississippi of the West." While places like Yuma,
Ariz., became military and trading outposts, the geography and erratic flow of
the Colorado made the river ultimately unsuitable for mass transportation.
Navigating the river often required maneuvering around exposed sand banks and
through shallow waters. The advent of the railroad ended the need for river
transport in the region. Shortly thereafter, large and ambitious management
projects, including the Hoover Dam, became the river's main purpose.
Irrigation along the river
started expanding in the second half of the 19th century, and agriculture still
consumes more water from the Colorado than any other sector. Large-scale
manipulation of the river began in the early 20th century, and now there are
more than 20 major dams along the Colorado River, along with reservoirs such as
Lake Powell and Lake Mead, and large canals that bring water to areas of the Imperial
and Coachella valleys in southern California for irrigation and municipal
supplies. User priority on the Colorado River is determined by the first
"useful purposing" of the water. For example, the irrigated
agriculture in California has priority over some municipal water supplies for
Phoenix, Ariz.
Inadequate Supply and Increasing Demand
When the original total
allocation of the river was set in the 1920s, it was far above regional
consumption. But it was also more than the river could supply in the long term.
The river was divided based on an estimated annual flow of roughly 21 billion
cubic meters per year. More recent studies have indicated that the 20th
century, and especially the 1920s, was a time of above-normal flows. These
studies indicate that the long-term average of flow is closer to 18 billion
cubic meters, with yearly flows ranging anywhere from roughly 6 billion cubic
meters to nearly 25 billion cubic meters. As utilization has increased, the
deficit between flow and allocation has become more apparent.
Total allocations of river resources for the Upper and Lower basins and Mexico plus water lost to evaporation adds up to more than 21 billion cubic meters per year. Currently, the Upper Basin does not use the full portion of its allocation, and large reservoirs along the river can help meet the demand of the Lower Basin. Populations in the region are expected to increase; in some states, the population could double by 2030. A study released at the end of 2012 by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation predicted a possible shortage of 3 billion cubic meters by 2035.
The Colorado River provides
water for irrigation of roughly 15 percent of the crops in the United States,
including vegetables, fruits, cotton, alfalfa and hay. It also provides
municipal water supplies for large cities, such as Phoenix, Tucson, Los
Angeles, San Diego and Las Vegas, accounting for more than half of the water
supply in many of these areas. Minute 319, signed in November 2012, gives
Mexico a small amount of additional water in an attempt to restore the delta
region. However, the macroeconomic impact on Mexico is minimal, since
agriculture accounts for the majority of the river's use in Mexico but only
about 3 percent of the gross domestic product of the Baja Norte province.
There is an imbalance of power
along the international border. The United States controls the headwaters of
the Colorado River and also has a greater macroeconomic interest in maintaining
the supply of water from the river. This can make individual amendments of the
1944 Treaty somewhat misleading. Because of the erratic nature of the river,
the treaty effectively promises more water than the river can provide each
year. Cooperation in conservation efforts and in finding alternative water
sources on the U.S. side of the border, not treaty amendments, will become
increasingly important as regional water use increases over the coming decades.
Conservation Efforts Along the Colorado
The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation
oversees the whole river, but the management of each basin is separate.
Additionally, within each basin, there are separate state management agencies
and, within each state, separate regional management agencies. Given the number
of participants, reaching agreements on the best method of conservation or the
best alternative source of water is difficult. There are ongoing efforts at
conservation, including lining canals to reduce seepage and programs to limit
municipal water use. However, there is no basin-wide coordination. In a 2012
report, the Bureau of Reclamation compiled a list of suggested projects but
stopped short of recommending a course of action.
A similar report released in
2008 listed 12 general options including desalinization, vegetation management
(elimination of water-intensive or invasive plants), water reuse, reduced use
by power plants and joint management through water banking (water is stored
either in reservoirs or in underground aquifers to use when needed). Various
sources of water imports from other river basins or even icebergs are proposed
as options, as is weather modification by seeding clouds in the Upper Basin.
Implementation of all these options would result in an extra 5 billion cubic
meters of water a year at most, which could erase the predicted deficit.
However, this amount is unlikely, as it assumes maximum output from each
technique and also assumes the implementation of all proposed methods, many of
which are controversial either politically or environmentally and some of which
are economically unviable. Additionally, many of the methods would take years
to fully implement and produce their maximum capacity. Even then, a more
reasonable estimate of conservation capacity would likely be closer to 1
billion-2 billion cubic meters, which would fall short of the projected deficit
in 2035.
The Potential for New Disputes
Conflict over water can arise
when there are competing interests for limited resources. This is seen
throughout the world with rivers that traverse borders in places like Central
Asia and North Africa. For the Colorado River, the U.S.-Mexico border is likely
less relevant to the competition for the river's resources than the artificial
border drawn at Lees Ferry.
Aside from growing
populations, increased energy production from unconventional hydrocarbon sources
in the Upper Basin has the potential to increase consumption. While this amount
will likely be small compared to overall allocations, it emphasizes the value
of water to the Upper Basin. Real or perceived threats to the Upper Basin's
surplus of water could be seen as threats to economic growth in the region. At
the same time, further water shortages could limit the potential for economic
growth in the Lower Basin -- a situation that would only be exacerbated by
growing populations.
While necessary, conservation
efforts and the search for alternative sources likely will not be able to make
up for the predicted shortage. Amendments to the original treaty typically have
been issued to address symptomatic problems. However, the core problem remains:
More water is promised to river users than is available on average. While this
problem has not come to a head yet, there may come a time when regional growth
overtakes conservation efforts. It is then that renegotiation of the treaty
with a more realistic view of the river's volume will become necessary. Any
renegotiation will be filled with conflict, but most of that likely will be
contained in the United States.
"U.S.,Mexico: The Decline of the Colorado River is republished with
permission of Stratfor."
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