High and Dry

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High  and  Dry  

The  search  for  water  in  the  Front  Range  —  and  a  conservation  plan  that  works     By  Natalia  Bayona     Every  year,  Colorado  farmers  douse  their  crops  with  1.5  trillion  gallons  of  water  —   enough  to  fill  nearly  a  third  of  the  Colorado  River.  Resources  run  low  as  families  and   industries  funnel  billions  of  gallons  down  the  drain  annually.  State  researchers  caution,   if  such  habits  aren’t  broken,  residents  may  be  parched  within  the  next  40  years.       The  Colorado  Water  Conservation  Board  collaborated  with  groups  who  govern  the   state’s  eight  river  basins,  called  basin  roundtables,  to  propose  a  solution  to  the  problem   in  the  state’s  first  water  plan,  which  was  released  on  Dec.  10.  The  board  reported  the   state’s  population  will  grow  to  about  twice  its  current  size  causing  a  supply  gap  of  163   billion  gallons  of  water  by  2050.  Colorado’s  water  plan  outlines  rigorous  conservation   strategies,  ways  of  finding  new  water,  and  alternatives  to  buying  water  from  farms  that   continue  to  dry.       But  even  the  most  extraordinary  efforts  to  save  water  in  Colorado’s  Eastern  Slope,   where  most  of  the  growth  is  anticipated,  won’t  make  up  for  the  shortfall.  That’s  because   farmers  on  the  Front  Range  —  the  urban  area  throughout  northeast  and  central   Colorado  —  irrigate  a  majority  of  the  1.5  trillion  gallons  of  water  used  statewide  every   year.  The  majority  of  the  state’s  water  is  on  the  Western  Slope,  which  requires  water   managers  to  transfer  gallons  across  the  Continental  Divide  to  raise  crops  and  fill   swimming  pools  in  the  Front  Range.  With  westerners  opposed  to  losing  more  water,  the   crowded  counties  of  Boulder  and  Denver  are  finding  new  ways  to  reduce  demand.       The  South  Platte  Basin,  the  23-­‐thousand-­‐square-­‐mile  basin  stretching  from  the  farms   and  goldmines  of  central  Colorado  near  Fairplay  to  the  Nebraska  state  line,  caps  the   West’s  needs  by  sending  as  much  water  as  possible  to  the  Front  Range  every  year.  A   major  goal  of  the  South  Platte  is  to  break  the  cycle  of  “buy-­‐and-­‐dry,”  a  transaction  made   by  utility  companies  that  moves  water  from  the  farm  to  our  taps.  Selling  of  irrigated   water  has  already  led  to  a  20  percent  loss  in  the  region’s  farmland.  The  Colorado  Water   Plan  suggests  alternatives  like  rotational  fallowing,  which  allows  farmers  to  sell  the   water  rights  to  a  specific  plot  for  a  short  time  and  pick  production  back  up  the  next   season.  Another  possibility  is  planting  native  crops  that  require  less  water,  a  practice   known  as  xeriscaping.    

 

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A  map  of  Colorado’s  basin  roundtables.  The  South  Platte  and  Metro  Roundtable  both  rely  on  the  South   Platte  and  work  together  to  manage  the  basin.  Photo  Credit:  The  South  Platte  Basin  Implementation  Plan   Report    

  However,  the  damaging  effects  of  growth  may  be  inevitable.       “Some  of  the  lands  currently  being  farmed  will  be  grown  onto  by  the  cities.  In  that  case,   there’s  really  no  alternative,”  says  Mark  Koleber,  chair  of  the  Metro  Roundtable.       As  developments  start  to  invade  irrigated  farmlands,  entitlements  to  that  water  will  be   handed  over  to  landowners.        

 

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Popula.on  Es.mates/Projec.ons  

Comparison  of  Popula.on  Growth  in  CO  and  Front  Range,   from  2000  to  2040   8,000,000   7,000,000   6,000,000  

Colorado  

5,000,000  

Front  Range  

4,000,000   3,000,000   2000  2005  2010  2015  2020  2025  2030  2035  2040  

Year       On  average,  the  Front  Range  uses  945  billion  gallons  of  water  (about  19%  of  Colorado’s  total  supply)  every   year,  according  to  a  2009  report  by  the  Front  Range  Water  Council.  Of  the  945  billion,  33  percent  goes  to   residents  and  businesses  and  66  percent  is  used  in  agriculture.  The  average  family  uses  about  108,600   gallons  of  water  in  one  year.  (Graph  derived  from  Colorado  Economic  and  Demographic  Information   System)  

  But  residents  and  water  managers  of  Boulder  County  are  working  to  mitigate  those   effects.  Long  ago,  cities  like  Boulder  and  Longmont  voted  in  “Reduce,  Reuse,  Recycle”   mandates  as  their  towns  began  to  grow.  And  they  plan  to  do  more  of  that  same  thing  in   face  of  the  2050  gap.     “Over  the  last  10  to  15  years,  a  lot  of  the  communities’  conservation  programs  have   been  able  to  reduce  demand  on  the  existing  water,”  explained  the  South  Platte’s   Boulder  Municipal  Representative  Ken  Huson.  “Municipal  providers  have  been  able  to   quite  adequately...meet  that  demand  through  some  water  supply  projects  as  well  as   reliance  on  really  some  good  conservation  programs.”     Families  have  asked  city  officials  to  establish  greenways  along  creek  corridors,  said   Huson.  “That’s  really  gotten  people  interested  in  water.”     Boulder’s  Center  for  ReSource  Conservation,  an  environmental  non-­‐profit  working  to   conserve  water  and  energy  in  homes  and  businesses  across  the  Front  Range,  helps  make   this  greener  vision  possible.  The  center  offers  Garden-­‐In-­‐A-­‐Box,  a  discounted  xeric   gardening  program,  to  help  landowners  design  and  maintain  gardens  at  a  low-­‐cost.  They   inspect  sprinkler  systems  and  indoor  water  appliances  and  install  low-­‐flow  upgrades  for   families  free  of  charge.       The  outdoor  irrigation  program  is  11  years  running  in  Boulder,  said  the  center’s  senior   manager  of  sustainability  programs  Morgan  Shimabuku.  Throughout  all  of  the  group’s    

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operating  range,  the  program  saves  “five  thousand  gallons  of  water  per  year  per   participant,”  she  says.         But  the  Center  for  ReSource  Conservation  wants  more  from  the  South  Platte  plan.       The  plan  is  missing  a  clear  objective,  Shimabuku  noted.  Other  states  with  a  need  for   mandatory  water  reduction  gain  the  most  public  involvement  by  setting  a  statistical  and   identifiable  goal.  Shimabuku  doesn’t  see  that  kind  of  language  in  the  South  Platte’s  plan.       Nonetheless,  a  potential  still  exists  for  outreach  with  or  without  those  guidelines.  The   South  Platte’s  current  per  capita  water  use  is  one  of  the  lowest  in  Colorado,  according   to  the  state  water  conservation  board.  And  Boulder’s  activism  is  beginning  to  spread.       “(People)  learn  from  successful  projects  and  are  able  to  then  take  that  part  to  their   communities,”  says  Huson.       Denver  Water  plans  to  integrate  some  of  Boulder’s  gardening  and  incentive  programs   into  their  water-­‐saving  repertoire,  too.  The  utility  already  operates  the  largest  water-­‐ recycling  program  in  Colorado.  Their  current  goal  is   to  reduce  22  percent  of  per  capita  water  use  by   2016.       One  pilot  campaign  sends  families  monthly  reports   that  measure  how  efficiently  they  water  their  lawns   based  on  the  size  of  their  plot.  The  report  also   compares  a  family’s  use  to  their  neighbor’s  use  in   hopes  of  breaking  bad  habits.   Denver  Museum  of  Nature  &     Science  in  City  Park,  Denver.  Denver   “Customers  have  responded  well  to  the  program,”   Water’s  recycled  water  manifolds   explains  Denver  Water’s  community  relations   provide  heating  and  cooling  to  the   specialist  Heather  Stauffer,  and  now  that  irrigation   museum’s  newest  addition,  a   season  is  complete,  staff  will  verify  reductions  in   126,000-­‐square-­‐foot  Education  &   Collections  Facility,  through  a   watering  by  comparing  usage  rates  to  those  of   process  called  ground  source  heat   families  outside  of  the  study  area.   pumping.  Pumps  transfer  the     Earth’s  heat  to  water  circulating  in   The  Colorado  Water  Plan  focuses  heavily  on  such   pipes  buried  deep  underground   forward-­‐thinking  conservation,  but  being  frugal   before  the  water  is  fed  back  into   the  utility’s  system.  This  unique   won’t  exactly  do  the  trick.  The  need  for  so  many   method  is  50%  more  efficient  than   gallons  means  more  water  will  be  apportioned  from   traditional  heating  and  cooling.   the  river  —  and  people  are  worried.   (Photo  courtesy  of  Wikimedia     Commons)   Residents,  concerned  about  the  environmental    

 

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pressures  caused  by  development,  have  disputed  over  some  projects  set  to  enlarge   reservoirs  in  the  South  Platte.  Denver  Water  is  awaiting  a  permit  to  expand  the  size  of   Gross  Reservoir,  located  just  south  of  Boulder,  to  three  times  its  capacity.       “It’s  (been)  more  than  a  decade  of  trying  to  get  this  permit,”  said  Travis  Bray,  the   system’s  project  manager.  “A  lot  of  opposition  at  first…which  is  good,  we  wanna  hear   those  concerns.”       Though,  other  projects  look  to  give  back  to  the  wetlands  what  new  water  storage  may   take  away.  The  Army  Corps  of  Engineers  recently  discovered  the  Chatfield  Reservoir   southwest  of  Denver  used  to  capture  floodwater  is  able  to  hold  an  additional  6.7  billion   gallons  for  municipal  and  agricultural  use.       In  the  case  of  most  projects,  public  commenting  periods  often  extend  deadlines.   Concerns  about  the  Colorado  Water  Plan  will  be  evaluated  through  September  2015  —   three  months  before  the  final  plan  is  handed  to  the  governor  for  approval.  However,  not   every  body  sees  these  extensions  as  a  drawback.     “The  more  we  participate,  the  better  it’ll  be  for  everyone,”  says  Shimabuku.      

 

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