Demand for water in
a river basin that serves more than 36 million people in the West and
Mexico is expected to overwhelm supply in the next half-century as the
region grows. So the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation asked the public what to do about it.
It got more than 140 ideas: Tow an iceberg to California and capture what melts for the Colorado River basin.
Divert water from the Mississippi River. Deliver water bags from Alaska
to southern California. Change the desire for beef to reduce demand for
thirsty cattle.
The bureau
won't single out any options to pursue, but it will review them as part
of its larger study of water supply and demand in the arid Colorado River basin through 2060. It published the suggestions in late March.
"It's an entertaining list," said Jim Pokrandt, who handles education and outreach for the bureau's Colorado River District in Colorado.
"There's a couple good ideas on there that bear further discussion.
Other ideas are kind of fantastic, as in maybe not based in reality."
The identities of most of the people submitting the ideas weren't disclosed.
Other
suggestions: Desalination, or removing salt to create fresh water.
Covering swimming pools to keep water from evaporating. Reforming the
oil and gas industry, which uses water in processes including hydraulic
fracturing.
Some ideas, including the iceberg suggestion, have floated around for years.
"The
bureau, to its credit, threw open the doors and said, 'We'll take all
ideas.' Some of the good old ones certainly reappeared," Pokrandt said
Wednesday.
About 30 million
people in Arizona, California, Nevada, Colorado, Wyoming, Utah and New
Mexico get drinking water from the Colorado River system, which also
benefits about 6 million Mexicans.
The
Colorado River Compact of 1922 outlines how states share the water, but
that deal was struck assuming about 2 million more acre-feet would be
available than there really is, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said. Drought, climate change and population growth have posed more challenges for limited water supplies.
One acre-foot is enough to cover 1 acre of land 1 foot deep, or enough to meet the annual needs of about two households.
"It's
the same challenge of the last century," Salazar said this week. "You
have huge and growing water demands in the Colorado River basin. It's an
arid area of our country which is going to continue to see declines in
precipitation."
One party who submitted an idea to the Bureau of Reclamation raised the possibility of incentives for businesses to move where energy and water supplies aren't as tight.
Native
American tribes have suggested exploring voluntary water transfers from
tribes with water rights. Other ideas include changing how water is
priced, removing invasive plant species that suck up water, and
requiring lawns and golf courses to be watered with "gray water," which
generally refers to wastewater like that from showers that could be used
for purposes other than drinking.
Colorado
Gov. John Hickenlooper said this week at a Colorado College conference
concerning the river that increased water conservation and new dams will
be needed, The Denver Post reported. Efforts are under way to explore
new reservoirs and to boost conservation.
Meanwhile,
the U.S. Geological Survey is looking at alternative water sources for
providing electricity. "Not all water is created equal. There are some
uses of water that don't really require the same quality of water as,
say, for drinking water," agency director Marcia McNutt said.
Protect
the Flows, a coalition of businesses in the Colorado River basin
states, said it supports affordable measures including enhanced urban
conservation, improved agricultural efficiency and expanded "water
banking," which would allow users to temporarily borrow water rights in
times of need.
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