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Tensions Are Rising Among States That Rely on the Colorado River

Water in the Colorado River is dwindling to levels that haven’t been seen in decades, and the seven states whose residents and farmers depend on the river can’t agree on a fair way to divide up what’s left.

Negotiations are going nowhere despite more than six months of ongoing talks, plus cajoling by the Trump administration, which twice gathered governors in hopes of a breakthrough that never came. States are already sniping at aspects of a water-use plan the federal Bureau of Reclamation is set to unveil this summer and impose later this year, and they’re threatening to sue each other over water deliveries, raising the prospects of prolonged legal battles just as Western states face demands to sharply reduce water use.

Arizona Agencies Take Step to Buying Desalinated Ocean Water From California

Arizona agencies have taken a key step that could eventually allow the state to buy desalinated ocean water.

Central Arizona Project (CAP), Salt River Project and the Arizona Department of Water Resources – along with the Southern Nevada Water Authority — recently signed a memorandum of understanding with a desalination plant in Southern California.

Arizona Signs Memorandum of Understanding With California Water Agencies

The ongoing drought in Arizona is prompting everyone to examine what lies ahead.

Acquiring water in the Grand Canyon State becomes increasingly difficult as water resources dwindle, including the Colorado River.

Arizona Could Get Water From San Diego Within 6 Months

Under a landmark agreement, Arizona is negotiating to buy Colorado River water now owned by a San Diego-area agency, and experts say the first of that water could be headed to the state in four to six months.

The goal of the new agreement, signed by federal officials and leaders of water agencies in Arizona, California and Nevada, is to eventually transfer potentially large amounts of Colorado River water between states.

California Scales Back Golden Mussel Safeguards at Vital Reservoir, Alarming Experts

The state of California is walking back protections meant to keep destructive golden mussels out of Lake Oroville, one of the largest and most important reservoirs in the state.

The move follows a new state-funded risk assessment that the invasive species poses a lower risk to the lake, which water managers say changes the state’s calculus on costly and difficult measures aimed at keeping the invaders at bay.

OPINION | San Diego’s Big Bet on Salt Water

While cities across drought-stricken western states struggle to meet their water needs, San Diego has a surplus of the all-important resource. That’s largely thanks to the county’s investment in desalination, which other localities would be wise to consider.

San Diego’s desalination plant first opened in 2015, and it now supplies about 10 percent of the county’s water — around 50 million gallons a day. That new supply has put the community on a more sustainable path.

California Farmer in Line To Lead Water Agency

Third-generation farmer from California’s San Joaquin Valley may become the next head of the federal agency that oversees water supplies in the drought-stricken Colorado River Basin.

Aubrey Bettencourt, who recently stepped down as head of USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service, is expected to be formally nominated by President Donald Trump as the next commissioner of the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation.

 

Congress Dives Into the West’s Water Brawl

Congress will not stand on the sidelines much longer as the drought-riddled Colorado River system careens toward crisis and the states that share its flows remain deadlocked, one of the region’s most powerful Republican senators said Wednesday.

Energy and Natural Resources Chair Mike Lee of Utah used a Wednesday hearing as a show of political force on behalf of his state and it’s upstream allies — Colorado, New Mexico and Wyoming — ahead of a critical decision point for a river that supplies 40 million people from the cattle ranches of Wyoming to the booming metropolises of Los Angeles, Phoenix and San Diego.

Colorado Officially Declares Statewide Emergency Due to Ongoing Drought Conditions

Colorado’s low snowpack and ongoing drought conditions led Gov. Jared Polis to declare a statewide drought emergency Thursday.

The governor activated Phase 3 of Colorado’s Drought Response Plan, which allows the state to take additional emergency response actions, such as emergency funding for unmet response needs, a request for a federal disaster declaration, and reductions in outdoor water usage at state facilities.

‘It’s an Injustice’: Shrinking State Funds Could Slow Fixes for Californians With Toxic Water

In a neighborhood flanked by grapevines and orange groves on the east side of the San Joaquin Valley, people cannot drink the water from their faucets because it’s contaminated.

Residents in the area north of Porterville, many of them farmworkers, have been discussing a solution, which they expect will require running pipes to connect to the nearby city system.