Happy New Water Year, where’d all that Colorado River water go?

Shrouded in pandemic fog, I’m only now getting to my sorta annual “Happy New Water Year!” post, where I traditionally look on in alarm at dropping Colorado River Basin reservoir levels and make fun of the Lower Basin for using too much water. The alarm remains – after a crappy runoff, combined storage in the …

Continue reading ‘Happy New Water Year, where’d all that Colorado River water go?’ »

The “Colorado River Simulation System” and Elinor Ostrom’s “authoritative image of the problem”

Burnishing my notes for UNM Water Resources class this afternoon to talk about Elinor Ostrom, I spent a bit of my morning going back through the underlined bits in my copy of her seminal book Governing the Commons. I first read it in the fall of 2009, when she won the Swedish prize. My initial …

Continue reading ‘The “Colorado River Simulation System” and Elinor Ostrom’s “authoritative image of the problem”’ »

Ghost of Water: The Inauspicious end of the Alameda Lateral

I’ve driven by the spot in the picture a jillion times in the 30 years I’ve lived in Albuquerque, and never noticed the ditch squeezed between #1 Plumbing and Air and the Chevron station on the corner of Edith and Candelaria. My latest pandemic bike riding project involves scouring GIS data from the Middle Rio …

Continue reading ‘Ghost of Water: The Inauspicious end of the Alameda Lateral’ »

Six Colorado River Basin States to Interior: Don’t Allow Utah to Blow up Basin Collaboration

The six Colorado River Basin states that do not have the letters “U-T-A-H” in their names just sent a remarkable letter to Secretary of the Interior David Bernhardt with a plea – don’t let the rush toward federal approval of Utah’s proposed Lake Powell Pipeline blow up the Colorado River Basin’s framework of collaborative rather …

Continue reading ‘Six Colorado River Basin States to Interior: Don’t Allow Utah to Blow up Basin Collaboration’ »

How municipal water conservation is keeping the Rio Grande through Albuquerque from going dry

One of the traditional “tragedy narratives” of western water is the idea that thirsty cities are draining our rivers. But in two of the last three years, precisely the opposite has happened here in Albuquerque. We’ve been limping along on a very bad year on the Rio Grande, with some of the lowest flows through …

Continue reading ‘How municipal water conservation is keeping the Rio Grande through Albuquerque from going dry’ »

San Diego’s puzzling pursuit of a big new pipeline to the Colorado River

I’m puzzling over the San Diego County Water Authority’s pursuit of a new Colorado River pipeline. I’ve been puzzling for a while, given a that it would be really expensive and that a really big pipe (aqueduct) already exists to carry the water to San Diego. My puzzlement was goosed by a report that surfaced …

Continue reading ‘San Diego’s puzzling pursuit of a big new pipeline to the Colorado River’ »

Comments on the Lake Powell Pipeline

The written version of remarks delivered by Eric Kuhn at the Aug. 25 Western Resource Advocates webinar on the Lake Powell Pipeline, featuring Eric, WRA’s Bart Miller, and Alice Walker, attorney for the Kaibab Band of Paiute Indians. PRESENTATION COMMENTS ON THE LAKE POWELL PIPELINE ERIC KUHN 8/25/2020 When John Cyran asked me to participate …

Continue reading ‘Comments on the Lake Powell Pipeline’ »

Lower Basin use of main stem* Colorado River water dropping to levels not seen since the 1980s

A friend last week pointed out something remarkable. Arizona, California, and Nevada are forecast this year to use just 6.8 million acre feet of their 7.5 million acre foot allocation of water from the main stem of the Colorado River. And that’s not just a one-off. Under “Tier Zero” of the Colorado River Basin Drought …

Continue reading ‘Lower Basin use of main stem* Colorado River water dropping to levels not seen since the 1980s’ »

Many thoughtful comments on my musings on California groundwater regulation and agricultural land value

Many thoughtful comments on yesterday’s breakfast musing on the implications of rising California ag land prices, here and over on the twitter, provide yet another reminder that my readers are far smarter than I am about this stuff. The most important point, which quite a few people made, is that a single California number hides …

Continue reading ‘Many thoughtful comments on my musings on California groundwater regulation and agricultural land value’ »