photo from SNWA |
The Southern Nevada Water Authority announced late last week
that after 22 years of drought within the basin, the level of Lake Mead fell
below 1,050 feet above sea level. Lake Mead drinking water Intake #1, the
topmost pumping station is now above the surface level of the Colorado River
reservoir behind Hoover Dam. The intake is the uppermost of three in the lake
formed behind the Hoover Dam that provides Las Vegas with 90% of its drinking
water supply.
from Bureau of Reclamation |
In their announcement the Southern Nevada Water Authority pointed out that its Low Lake Level Pumping Station #3 installed in anticipation of this happening is operational. Southern Nevada Water Authority constructed the third drinking water intake capable of drawing Colorado River water at lake Mead at elevations below 1,000 feet. Intake #3 ensures Southern Nevada’s access to its primary water supply as lake levels continue to decline due to the drought conditions. The problem is the level of lake Mead keeps falling and despite significant conservation efforts there is no longer enough water to supply the region. There is a time limit on how much longer there will be water.
There has been a drought in the Colorado River Basin for the
past 22 years. This combined with higher temperatures has led to what some are
calling aridification of the region. Lake Mead has seen more than 130-foot drop
in the water level since the turn of the century. The annual flow of the
Colorado River is estimated to have fallen about 20% in the 21st Century
compared to the 20th Century due to both rising temperatures and drought. The
region is in trouble.
from SNWA |
The 1922 Colorado River Compact, negotiated by the seven basin states (Colorado, Nevada, Utah, New Mexico, Wyoming, Arizona, California) divided the Colorado River basin into upper and lower portions, allotted the Colorado River’s water on the basis of territory. The allocation of water rights based on territory allowed development to proceed in the lower basin (essentially California) while safeguarding supplies for the upper basin. Then, as now, California's growth and demand for water was viewed with concern by her neighbors.
Now with more than twenty dry years, the reservoirs have
dwindled to their lowest levels recorded. Allotted shares of water in the
basin exceeds the average long-term (1906 through 2018) historical natural flow
of under 16.0 million acre-feet. To date, the imbalance has been managed, and
demands largely met by slowly using up the considerable amount of reservoir
storage capacity in the Colorado River system- Lake Powell and Lake Mead that once held
approximately 60 million acre-feet (nearly 4 years of average natural flow of
the river). It was assumed that drought years would be followed by wet year to
refill the reservoirs. That has not happened recently, the last time the
reservoirs filled was 1983. The basin is in its 22nd year of drought and the
true existential crisis for Las Vegas looms just over the horizon. For without
water there is no life.
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