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Favorite Blogs

  • Aguanomics
    The economics of water (and some other stuff), courtesy of economist David Zetland.
  • Water SISWEB
    From UC-Davis water students. More than just a blog, it's a water resources community social bookmarking site. The users run the show, and all can participate.
  • Great Lakes Law
    Noah Hall's blog about - what else - all things wet and legal in the Great Lakes region!
  • Misublog
    Laura Makar's blog is designed to inform and contribute to the discussion of water policy.
  • AWRA
    The water resources blog of the American Water Resources Association.
  • Campanastan
    That's 'Campana-stan', or 'Place of Campana', formerly 'Aquablog'. Michael Campana's personal blog, promulgating his Weltanschauung.
  • Waterblogged
    Shaun McKinnon of the Arizona Republic.
  • Waterblogged.info
    Jared Simpson's water blog. Great writing and insight, for non-water wonks, too.
  • Water For The Ages
    Abby, another PNWer, writes about global water issues with passion and concern.
  • Crooks and Liars
    John Amato's blog about...'Crooks and Liars'.
  • H2O Podcast
    Joseph Puentes does us WaterWonks a service by posting podcasts of conferences, etc.
  • H2ONCoast
    Oregon's North Coast water blog by Rob Emanuel of Oregon State University's Sea Grant program.
  • Aquafornia
    Aqua Blog Maven's awesome Southern California water blog. Everything you need to know about SoCal water issues, and more!
  • Western Water Blog
    The 'mystery blog' about Western USA water issues. What more can I say?
  • WaterWired
    All things fresh water. A service of the Institute for Water and Watersheds at Oregon State University (water.oregonstate.edu).
  • Water Words That Work
    From Eric Eckl, a communications and marketing expert for environmental and other progressive causes.
  • Watercrunch
    The sound when water and people collide. Robert Osborne emphasizes Southeastern USA water issues. Excellent graphics and features.
  • John Fleck
    Science writer at the Albuquerque Journal. Great stuff on climate, water, and more.
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Western USA

July 05, 2008

High Country News: Stream Restoration and Protection

The current online edition of the High Country News has a number of articles on stream restoration and protection. These you can view for free, and are online only.

  • In Montana, counties are specifiying streamside setbacks to protect their waterways.
  • Bill Zeedyk, the "Riparian Restoration Guru", using "induced meandering", helps streams achieve a healthy flow by using simple rock and wood structures. He "lets the water do the work." Some of my students at the University of New Mexico used his techniques in their field research.
  • Dave Rosgen, the "Restoration Cowboy", has been going against the flow for years as he promulgates his approach to stream restoration (this article was originally published in 2003).

I have never met Zeedyk or Rosgen, but I know of them through their reputations.

I don't claim to know much about stream restoration. A former colleague of mine at the Desert Research Institute in the late 1970s - early 1980s, Bill Woessner, has influenced me. Bill has done much excellent work on "stream renaturalization" (he eschews the term "stream restoration") since he arrived at the University of Montana in 1981. He is now chair of Geosciences. One of Bill's pet peeves, which I share, is the fact that stream restoration techniques and practitioners often neglect to consider the ground water component.  

Pesky stuff, that ground water.

“We abuse land because we regard it as a commodity belonging to us. When we see land as a community to which we belong, we may begin to use it with love and respect.” – Aldo Leopold

June 26, 2008

USGS Congressional Briefing: Climate Change Impacts on the Colorado River

On 6 June 2008, the USGS held a briefing for Members of Congress and Congessional staffers on Climate Change: Impacts on the Colorado River.

Some notes from a colleague:

  • Tony Willardson of the Western States Water Council spoke about using the thermal band on the planned Landsat 8 for measuring evapotranspiration and the continual difficulties with funding and support for this sensor.
  • Dr. Gregory J. McCabe of the USGS stated that current climate change models are not good enough to predict the change in water supply. For further information please read this article.
  • Dr. Terrance Fulp, Deputy Director of the Bureau of Reclamation's Lower Colorado Region, talked about market-driven approaches to water management. He described a joint task force that is part of the overall Department of Interior task force on climate change.
  • Eric Kuhn, General Manager of the Colorado River Water Conservation District, discussed the variables influencing water supply and demand: fixed obligations on the upper Colorado River, early snowmelt, tree loss from moths, and oil-shale industry demands, to name a few. He asked what efforts are underway to better utilize satellite data for the Colorado River Basin, specifically flow, temperature, and quality.

You can view speakers' biographies and PowerPoints here.

“The true measure of a man is how he treats someone who can do him absolutely no good.” – Samuel Johnson

June 19, 2008

T. Boone Pickens Speaks: Water Is The New Oil

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Imagine an 80-year old Oklahoman-turned-Texas oilman starring in a movie, There Will Be Water.

Not too far fetched, actually.

T. Boone Pickens thinks water is the new oil. Here's the cover story from the 23 June 2008 issue of BusinessWeek. The artwork is from the magazine.

Pickens was a so-called "corporate raider" (he prefers the term "shareholder activist") in the 1970s and 1980s when he and his company, Mesa Petroleum, took on the "big boys" like Gulf Oil and Unocal.

He was one of the major financial backers of the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth group.

But oil is a thing of the past for Pickens; the article claims he is now the largest single individual owner of water rights in the USA. He owns a huge ranch in Roberts County, TX, and would like to pump ground water from the Ogallala aquifer beneath his ranch and sell it to thirsty Texas cities.

How much? Try 200,000 acre-feet per year. He can pump this much because of Texas' quaint ground water law, "the right of capture", aka "The Law of the Biggest Pump." If you own land, you can sink a well and pump virtually to your heart's content. Doesn't matter whether you own one acre or 68,000, the size of Pickens' ranch.

Pickens claims he is pumping in "self-defense"; if he doesn't, someone else will pump his water from underneath him. So he might as well sell the water.

But so far, none has taken him up on his offer. He thinks that the Dallas-Fort Worth area is a potential buyer - not now, but eventually. Before he can sell his water he needs to construct a 250-mile long pipeline. The article describes how how will accomplish this. Fascinating.

Thumb_0825_40covsto I remember when I was in New Mexico. Eastern New Mexico was rife with rumors that Pickens' people were running around trying to buy water rights.

I've heard Pickens speak twice, both at conferences: July 2002 in Traverse City, MI, and April 2005, at the inaugural Ground Water Summit in San Antonio. He was trying to peddle his water to San Antonio, but the city was not interested - at least not at the price he was asking.

I had actually invited him to keynote the San Antonio conference and it was fitting: our first Summit, in Texas, in a place reliant on ground water, during a time when Pickens was hawking his water.

Pickens is a cross between a "good ol' boy" - and I do not mean that as a pejorative term - and a shrewd businessman. He has been good to his alma mater, Oklahoma State University (see my post on his generosity and its down side). He's made and lost a couple of fortunes.

When I addressed him as "Mr. Pickens" he said, "Call me Boone, son." He gave a good talk in San Antonio, and although it was short on details, it was humorous, with an almost "Aw shucks, I'm just an Okie boy who's done well" attitude. I liked him; he was polite, and his "handlers", with whom I dealt, were equally so.

Anyway, read this article. It's very good and describes some of the legislative somersaults necessary to implement Pickens' plans. 

The article also notes that Royal Dutch Shell is buying up ground water rights in Colorado in anticipation of its oil-shale operation, which will require large amounts of water.

Maude Barlow, where are you now?

"Water is a commodity. Heck, isn't it like oil?" -- T. Boone Pickens

June 18, 2008

Sarah Bates on Land and Water: And Ne'er the Twain Shall Meet?

Drought_591 Yet another rant on the land-water nexus from Aquadoc, right? Not so fast, my friend.

Sarah Bates, one of the best thinkers on this topic, who doesn't rant and is always worth reading, sent me this notice about a short piece she just posted to the Science Progress site.

The photo from the article, courtesy of AP/Ed Andrieski, is of a "lake" near Frisco, CO.

To whet your appetite, here are the first three paragraphs:

A recent issue of National Geographic featured a compelling story on the double-barreled threat facing western states: rapid population growth and climate change. “The American West was won by water management,” proclaims the article. “What happens when there’s no water left to manage?”

This question vexes more than water managers. It may seem absurd to approve development without reliable water supplies, but that is exactly what has happened in many communities—leaving homeowners and other taxpayers holding the bill when extravagant measures become necessary to gain access to water.

Just as homeowners demand, and building codes require, safe wiring and solid foundations for their dwellings, they also deserve to know that their drinking water taps will deliver clean, reliable water for decades to come. Moreover, states are currently reckoning with the question of what happens when there is little water left to manage—two weeks ago, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger declared a statewide drought.

Development is still progressing in some states despite the recent water shortages, and in areas where the supply is suspect. Agricultural water rights are being transferred to urban areas. But there are some places where concerns are being expressed, such as in Nevada, where Las Vegas' plan to pump rural ground water is casuing alarm among some.

Bates mentions the recently-passed Colorado law that gives local governments the right to deny developments without adequate water supplies, but the law gives local governments the power to permit such development. There are no "time horizons" prescribed in the Colorado law, unlike in other states.

So what would an ideal water supply assurance law look like? Back to Bates' article:

According to Utah law professor Lincoln Davies such a law would be: (1) mandatory; (2) stringent; (3) statewide; (4) broadly applicable, applying to more than just large projects; and (5) interconnected with broader planning mechanisms for land, water, and environmental protection. Thus far, no state statute meets all these criteria, though the legislation enacted in California in 2001 comes closest.

She's written just a short paper this time around, but she mentioned that she will be preparing a more detailed policy briefing paper with specific legislative options for making this (land-water) link.

I'll anxiously await that one.

And some day, it'll all be right.

"Life has two rules. Number one: never quit. Number two: remember rule number one." -- Duke Ellington
 

June 14, 2008

What You'll Pay for Western Water

Dan Whipple wrote this article in New West a few days ago. I'll cut to the chase. 

Whipple sees two basic problems with water in the West:

1) we really don't value water the way we should; and

2) we haven't reexamined the ways we allocate water - as he says, we're still treating it the same way we did when the West was rural and the main industries were ranching and farming.

Regarding the first item: some (myself included) believe that we should implement water user fees to a greater degree than we do now. If you get water from a utility, the utility would pay and then pass it on to the customer. If you owned water rights, you'd pay some kind of fee (perhaps annually) per acre foot. If you had an exempt well - one that does not require a water right - you'd pay an annual fee. Ditto for an irrigation well.  

I was at a recent meeting where someone brought up this concept. Several attendees shot that guy looks that could have killed.

It's not an easy sell.  

Regarding the second item: what would you give for the life (political or biological) of a Western politician or water manager who advocated revising Western water law to correspond to today's realities (urbanization, ecosystem flows, etc.)?  

His article also revealed that every Western state but Colorado has language in its water law requiring the state to administer water "in the public interest." I did not realize Colorado was an outlier.

One minor misstatement: he lumps Albuquerque in there as one city that's pumping its aquifer dry. That's no longer true. A decade ago the city realized its aquifer was being overdrafted and devised a plan to reduce/retire pumping to "save ground water for a non-rainy day." They are doing that now, but are relying more on surface water, which may not be a wise move. And more communities are enacting conservation plans and requiring developers to demonstrate adequate water reserves for up to 75-100 years in some areas.

We've come a long way since 1976, when I was amazed to find that in my new home town of Reno, NV, residential water meters were illegal. But we aren't there yet.  

Whipple's written a good article; give it a read. 

"State laws governing water allocations have been virtually unchanged since the Earps took out the Clantons." -- Dan Whipple  

June 11, 2008

Pat Mulroy 101: Profile of 'The Chosen One'

Scaled_0608_MET_WATER01_t651 Michael Dale alerted me to this a fascinating story from the Las Vegas Sun about Patricia Mulroy, who heads the Southern Nevada Water Authority and is the putative "800-pound gorilla" of Western Water.

And that's the nicest name some people call her.

One might call it a "puff piece" but I found it quite informative. I always wondered how she got started. Now I know.

Look at the picture. You want to mess with her?

Mobster Anthony "Tony the Ant" Spilotro hovering over her desk? Watch it, Tony!

Interesting that she apparently has no formal training in water.

We can complain about how unrelenting she is, but she gets the job done for Nevada, primarily southern Nevada (Clark County). Many water agencies undoubtedly wish she was their director.

"As God is my witness, I will never be thirsty again." -- apologies to Scarlett O'Hara, Gone With The Wind

June 07, 2008

The Pacific Northwest as a Water Farm: Gordon Grant Responds

My colleague Gordon Grant has requested space to respond to my earlier posts in which I cited his work on water development from the Cascades volcanics. His post will make more sense if you first read this previous post.

Feel free to leave a comment.

Note: if you click on Gordon's name above, you will be escorted to his group's (Watershed Processes Group) homepage, where you can download a couple of papers describing relevant WPG work: 1) the "Running Dry..." paper; and 2) the "Deep groundwater..." paper by Tague et al. 

********************

Mike:
I'm writing to you directly rather than posting to your blog because I wanted to respond off-record to your comments. But in the interests of broadening the discussion, as indicated below, I would appreciate it if you would condsider posting this as a reply rather than a comment, so that it is seen by others who read WaterWired.

First, thanks for bringing the issue that appeared in your blog forward...it's one that, in my view, deserves discussion on a much broader front. But I have to confess that I really don't understand your point. My vision for the future is not about pipes, although given the way California is plumbed and the long legs of the fantasy of diverting the Columbia, that's not outside the realm of possibility either. Although I think the reporter gave some ideas a little more body English than I would have, starting with the title of the piece, I basically stand by the story.  

From your comments I get the sense that you interpreted this story as some sort of advocacy on my part for how California could solve its water problems by taking the Pacific Northwest's water. That is not at all my intent. By way of context, both this and the prior story that appeared in the Bend Bulletin came about because I was contacted by reporters after they heard or read of our work - I'm not out selling this to the newspapers. Instead, my comments were intended to focus attention on where water comes from now, and how those places are likely to become increasingly important in a climate-warmed and water-challenged future. The importance of the youngest parts of the Cascade volcanic arc as sources of deep groundwater and persistent summer streamflows, whether in N. CA (Pitt, Hat, and Fall Ck), So. OR (Klamath, Rogue) or the central Cascades (McKenzie, Willamette, Deschutes) seems clear to me and I disagree that it is premature to say this - the technical papers describing this (and not just our group's) are already in the refereed literature. The implications of this geography of water for long-term supply and demand are less clear, but I also maintain that now is the time to begin the discussion of what this geography of water means for the region - and it is IS a regional and not just a state issue. 

I am not suggesting that we give or sell water to California - for one thing there is currently no infrastructure that would allow this to happen, and the legal and water rights issues are huge. Moreover, I'm certainly not trying to be an alarmist ("the Californians are coming for our water!"). But as recent events both in the Southeast and Southwest US, southern Spain (see this week's NY Times) and many other places suggest, demand for water under conditions of scarcity is a serious social, political, and economic problem that is likely to only get worse in the future. I do believe that in a water-challenged world, water will come to people or people will come to water. I don't pretend to know which way things will go, but I do know if the climate changes, that question will need to be answered. That's not an advocacy position for mining the volcanic aquifer (as your previous post seemed to imply I was suggesting) or anything else - the implications for people, institutions, aquifers, and ecosystems are very complex and no one has sorted them out. The answer will be driven by economics, politics, and geography (not necessarily in that order) and constrained by laws, which are themselves changeable. The laws governing water rights and inter-state transfers are formidable, but not immutable - just imagine where the political center of gravity would be after 5+ years of serious drought in the Southwest. 

My point here is not to scare people with bogeymen, but to help people understand and appreciate the enormous value of water, particularly that coming from the wilderness areas and National Forest lands along the Cascade crest. We've been invoking that value for years, but it's mostly been promulgated as nice environmental rhetoric. I happen to think it's more than rhetoric, and possibly the best example we have of "ecosystem services". Helping people understand the value of high quality water resources that have largely been viewed as free for the taking is not going to be easy but I think you and I agree that it's an important goal.

I'm eager to continue this discussion, and open to the suggestion that this may come across as more alarmist that I intend - but I basically think the story is valid. And I think than an excellent role for IWW would be to help sponsor a colloquium where these ideas can be developed and exchanged. We've talked about this in the past, but perhaps with growing public interest and attention to these issues (i.e., Schwarzenegger just declared drought in California), we should move this forward.

Gordon

June 04, 2008

Will the Pacific Northwest Become a Water Farm?

Last week I received a call from one of our legislative liaisons who told me he would forward me an email inquiring about selling Oregon water in the international market. "Uh-huh," I thought. I received the email, in which the author, a prominent Oregonian, speculated that if Oregon could annually sell 1 MAF of its water, presumably taken from the mighty Columbia River, for the paltry sum of 1 cent per gallon, that would generate about $3.26B annually for Oregon's coffers.

For a state with limited financial resources, that's quite a sum.  Our legislative person asked if he could supply my name and email to the individual, and I said "Sure". Haven't heard anything yet.

I said to no one in particular, "Why sell our water on the international market? Just sell it to Las Vegas." But I also thought, "Oh boy, it's happening. It's coming back - the Pacific Northwest as 'water farm.' " As Yogi Berra reputedly said, "It's like deja-vu all over again."

Then yesterday, colleague Lisa Gaines sent me this article by Alex Breitler that appeared in the 1 June 2008 Stockton Record. The title was provocative: Northwest may hold secret to water woes. It detailed a California talk given by one of my colleagues, hydrologist Gordon Grant, about whom I posted last fall. It's his pitch that the ground water of the Pacific Northwest may supply the parched Californians and other Westerners as temperatures rise.

In the article below, the material in italics is from the article; the non-italicized material is mine. 

Map_cascade_range In a few days, most rivers and streams draining from the Sierra Nevada will have peaked for the season, channeling snowmelt from the granite-specked highlands to reservoirs, the ocean, your kitchen tap.

The melt came early this year. Just like last year.

Climate change threatens California's longtime reliance on the spiny Sierra for most of its water, experts agree.

And that, one scientist says, is likely to increase interest in a more reliable source: the porous lava flows of the Cascade Range in Oregon and Washington, which hide away enough water to cover California in a pool 3 inches deep.

So? Lake Tahoe holds enough water to cover California to a depth of 14 inches. Should we drain the lake?

As water supplies tighten in coming decades, the Northwest's groundwater surplus is likely to garner new attention from around the western United States, said Gordon Grant, a hydrologist for the U.S. Forest Service in Corvallis, Ore. Grant presented his research earlier this spring to fisheries experts gathered for a conference in Lodi.

"It is almost inevitable that the areas that store large quantities of groundwater will become increasingly looked at to provide water," Grant said.

As early as the mid-1960s there was talk in California of tapping the Pacific Northwest by diverting the Columbia River and pumping flows south through a massive system of canals, tunneling through mountain ranges on the way to Los Angeles..

The original proposal died in 1968, was resurrected in the early 1990s but ultimately was not politically viable. Even if it had been, officials at the time said, conserving water and allowing farmland to lie fallow would be far cheaper than building an extensive network of canals.

Yeah, I remember hearing my professors at the University of Arizona talk about this in the early 1970s. I also remember the NAWAPA project. More recently, I heard about the NARA project (see this post, too)

Today, California is occupied with figuring out how to convey water within its own boundaries, including whether to build a canal around the Delta to feed freshwater to other regions.

But climate change is looming.

The Cascades hold up to seven times more water underground than the range stores in its snowpack each year, Grant said. That's enough groundwater to fill Utah's Great Salt Lake.

Again - so?

Snowflakes melt and trickle into the ground, emerging perhaps several decades later in lush forested springs. For this reason, waterways there flow steadily even late into the summer.

On the other hand, snow drains off the rocky Sierra Nevada like water off a grocery store parking lot. Frank Gehrke, who coordinates measurements of California's snowpack each winter for the state Department of Water Resources, said there is some groundwater storage in parts of the range, but not nearly enough to cancel out the loss of snowpack as temperatures warm.

The Sierra are granitic, whereas the Cascades are volcanic (mostly basalt). In general, basalts possess far more permeability and storage than granitic rocks.

As a result, rivers and streams begin to dry up earlier in the summer.

California does benefit from groundwater toward the southern end of the Cascades, including spring-fed rivers that drain into the Sacramento River.

"At a minimum, the value of those rivers will only increase," Grant said.

Water may eventually become the most valuable product harvested from national forest lands, he said. This could mean changes in demographics - where people live and work.

"If you project forward into a climate-warm world, the places where water is available, particularly in the late summer, those places are going to be disproportionately attractive to human beings," Grant said.

Exactly how that's going to play out, he said, he doesn't know.

In the post last October, I gave my opinion of Dr. Grant's premise. It's premature to make such statements, given our lack of knowledge of the volcanic ground water systems in the Cascades. For one thing, it's more than just a matter of permeability and porosity. We need to know the large-scale storage properties, the recoverability of the ground water, and the effects of withdrawals on hydrologic systems and ecosystems.

It's tempting to say that there is a lot of available ground water beneath the Cascades, but we just don't know at this point.

“Life does not consist mainly, or even largely, of facts and happenings. It consists of the storm of thoughts that is forever blowing through one’s head.” – Mark Twain 

April 27, 2008

Reno Earthquake Trashes Water-Supply Flume - Pictures, Map Here

Friday evening the Reno area was hit by a magnitude 4.7 earthquake;  USA Today has the story. The quake trashed a 125-foot flume section of the Highland Ditch, which conveys Truckee River water from west of the city to one of the city's treatment plants. Fortunately, the damage to the flume occurred near a stream channel, which carried the water away.

Friend and colleague Don Mahin sent me these pictures of the damaged flume. He told me the water supply to the Reno area was not compromised, as there are three redundant systems feeding water to the treatment plant served by Highland Ditch.  Here is a story on the water supply from the Reno Gazette-Journal.

Don sent this link to a USGS map of the area showing up-to-date activity (a snapshot at 1500 UTC time is shown below). Don told me the temblor was originally pegged as magnitude 5 and with an epicenter near Stampede Reservoir (just north of Truckee, CA, on the USGS map). Don mentioned that when he heard that, he feared a dam failure becuase of liquefaction of the dam foundation. The epicenter was later pegged in Mogul with a 4.7 magnitude. Mogul is a subdivision on the western edge of Reno. Aftershocks are ongoing.

Here's an article on the earthquake activity from the Reno Gazette-Journal.

I knew there was some reason why I felt compelled to watch reruns of Reno 911! Friday night.

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April 21, 2008

ABA Best Papers in Water and Environmental Law

Colleague Patrick Griffiths of the City of Bend alerted me to this information, which is from the American Bar Association's Section on Environment, Energy, and Resources (EER).

The ABA Section of Environment, Energy, and Resources recognizes the following paper submissions as the "Best Papers" prepared for the 37th Annual Conference on Environmental Law (Keystone), 26th Annual Water Law Conference, 15th Section Fall Meeting, and the 36th Annual Conference on Environmental Law. Each author was presented with a certificate of recognition and a Section publication as a token of appreciation for their outstanding submissions.

You can download each of these free here.

Here are the Environmental Law winners:

Thomas A. Bloomfield | Gallagher & Gallagher, a Professional Corporation
The Topsy Turvey World of CERCLA Uncertain Law – Uncertain Science

Sharon M. Mattox | Vinson & Elkins, L.L.P.
The 404(b)(1) Guidelines: Overview and New Developments

Rex R. Raimond | The Meridian Institute
Ethical Considerations Regarding the International Development and Application of Nanotechnology and Nanoscale Materials

Douglas R. Williams | Saint Louis University School of Law
Complexity, Competence, and Confidentiality: Ethical Issues at the Cutting Edge of Environmental Law

Water Law winners:

Charlton H. Bonham | Trout Unlimited
A Recipe from the Field for Dam Removal Agreements

Sandra Zellmer | University of Nebraska College of Law
Anti-Speculation: Ghost-busting, Trust-busting, or Ensuring Beneficial Use?

I have read only Zellmer's paper, which both Patrick and I strongly recommend. Her paper graces the 15 April 2008 issue of The Water Report. A brief synopsis follows, and you can download the paper here:

Download BestZellmer_WaterLaw08.pdf

Zellmer is an excellent and entertaining writer, and the paper's title befits the topic. Any paper that starts and ends with Dr. Peter Venkman and Ghostbusters  (yes, that Ghostbusters) gets my vote. She delves into the realm of Western water law and the prohibition it places on speculation, i.e., the purchasing of water rights and holding them as they increase in value, just like one does with stocks and art.  This proscription against privatization or commodification of water has served as a barrier to speculation. She posits whether this prohibition still serves the public interest, or is merely a relic, but notes that many feel water speculation is "just plain wrong."

Zellmer then takes us on a journey to visit with "Water Baron" (synonymous with "Robber Baron"?) T. Boone Pickens and the Ogallala aquifer (High Plains aquifer, actually), the Great Lakes, Michigan (bottled water - see this publication from the Great Lakes Law blog), California, and British Columbia. Pickens is referred to as the "most brazen" of the Water Barons.

She correctly states that not all privatization schemes are alike, and even relates that Enron was keenly interested in water privatization, but realized that water was quite a different commodity from oil or natural gas, and not as easily "corralled". Its foray into the water field cost the firm $300M.

Cut to the chase: Zellmer concludes that some believe that anti-speculation provisions in Western water law may:

  1. have the "perverse effect" of promoting speculation, in the sense of allowing a speculator to "disguise" his/her true intentions by purchasing water rights, then using them to irrigate a crop with little or no value, simply to hold onto the water rights for future sale; and
  2. prevent rational planning for future growth (although the prevalence of municipal exceptions undermines this belief, since municipal use is often treated as a "super-beneficial" use).

She notes that nearly 50% of all Western water transfers occur in Colorado, the state believed to have the strongest anti-speculation laws.

A very thought-provoking paper indeed.

"Why worry? Each one of us is carrying an unlicensed nuclear accelerator on his back. " -- Dr. Peter Venkman, Ghostbusters

April 18, 2008

Colorado Tackles the Land Use-Water Availability Nexus

Well, here I go again - getting off on the land use - water availability nexus. Must be my impending 60th birthday!Homemap                                                                               

Yesterday Alberta, today Colorado. Connecting land use and water availability - what a concept! Next you thing you know, a single agency will be jointly managing/regulating water quantitity and quality.

In its 10 April 2008 edition, The Durango Herald reported that the Colorado House of Representatives approved a bill that would inject water availability concerns into local subdivision planning. Joe Hanel's story appears below.

DENVER - In Colorado, urban growth has always been a matter for local governments to decide.

But on Wednesday, the House of Representatives declared that the water used by new subdivisions is a matter of statewide concern.

The House approved House Bill 1141, which requires developers to prove they have adequate water supplies before city councils give their approvals to build.

The bill by Rep. Kathleen Curry, D-Gunnison, was delayed for almost two months while she rewrote it.

Although Curry called the bill a "baby step," it drew fire from developers and several Republicans. The current law requires proven water supplies before county commissions, but not city councils. Curry's bill applies to new developments of 50 or more houses.

Rep. Don Marostica, R-Loveland, who is a land developer, said anti-growth city councils will abuse the bill.

"I don't think Representative Curry wants to stop growth, but that's what this bill is going to do," Marostica said.

He predicted water prices will spike in the next few days as developers try to protect themselves from Curry's bill.

As indicated by Rep. Marostica's comments, this bill, if enacted, will ruffle many feathers. It really inserts the state into a an area long regarded as a local prerogative.

And some municipalities are already addressing the issue. As Hanel indicated in his article, Loveland's master plan already addresses the water supply it will need for its 150,000 future residents. The town had 61,000 in 2006, and 37,000 in 1990, according to the Census Bureau.

Hanel continues:

The story is the same across the state. Three million people are expected to move to Colorado in the next 30 years, mostly to the Front Range. The Colorado River Basin is the last substantial supply available to the state, and some Western Slope water experts think the river might be tapped out already.

What? The Colorado River? Tapped out? You think?

The article goes on:

Water crises have already struck some Front Range subdivisions.

Rep. Marsha Looper, R-Calhan, has several constituents who have to truck in water in her Colorado Springs-area district.

"We need this bill. I wish this bill would have run 20 years ago," Looper said.

Some said the bill wasn't stringent enough. Rep. Claire Levy (D-Boulder) said: "It seems like what we have here is something that's supposed to provide assurance of a long-term water supply, when it's still speculative about whether that supply will be available."

But Rep. Curry said that it's best to go one step at a time when talking about local land-use planning. She was happy to finally take the debate to the House of Representatives and said that she appreciated the debate, which Colorado has needed to have.

The House approved HB 1141 on a voice vote. It faces one more vote in the House before heading to the Senate. So there is a ways to go yet.

"There's plenty of water. It's just not in the right location." -- Colorado state Rep. Don Marostica (R-Loveland), referring to HB 1141

Long Beach Water Gets Serious About Conservation

This is the current photo of the week from Brown and Caldwell's California Water News. It's a photo of a billboard that is a component of Long Beach Water's summer-long conservation campaign.

Water_conservation

I am still partial to the ads for Denver Water's conservation campaign.

"An ounce of blood is worth more than a pound of friendship." -- Spanish proverb

April 14, 2008

OSU Spring Seminar "Water in the West" - Online Access

Waterinthewest

Our Spring Hydrology Seminar "Water in the West", features an all-start lineup. Since most of you cannot make these presentations, the Hydrophiles student group will post videos, PowerPoints, and any relevant publications a few days after each talk. Go to the Hydrophiles WWW site.

Here is a flyer: Download hydro_sem_s08.pdf

The list follows (hot links take you to personal homepages, if the speaker has one):

  • April 9: Shannon Peterson, Klamath Basin Rangeland Trust, Finding balance in the upper Klamath Basin
  • April 16: Christina Tague, UC-Santa Barbara, Modeling climate change and hydrology
  • April 23: Adell Amos, University of Oregon, Oregon water law, climate change, and energy
  • April 30: Roger Bales, UC-Merced, Sierra Nevada snowcover patterns
  • May 7: Tamra Mabbott, Umatilla County Planning Department, Water and land use planning in Oregon
  • May 14: Todd Dawson, UC-Berkeley, Water, plants and California's drought-prone ecosystems
  • May 21: Brad Udall, NOAA, The Colorado River at 1900, 2000, and 2100
  • May 28: John J. Warwick, Desert Research Institute, Modeling of the Lower Truckee River, Nevada
  • June 4: Jay Frentress and Jay Zarnetske: Science, policy, and water in the West: an impromptu graduate student discussion

If you are in the Corvallis area on these dates, drop by - 4 PM, in Room 4000 of the Agricultural and Life Sciences (ALS) Building. Here is a campus map.

Map_placeholder2over Some of you may be wondering about Roger Bales' school, UC-Merced. It opened in September 2005 and is the 10th campus in the University of California System. It is the first new American research university of the 21st century and is strongly oriented toward the environment and student-oriented research. It serves the fast-growing San Joaquin Valley and is located about 75 minutes north of the Fresno airport.

"If I were alive, I would definitely attend these awesome presentations!" -- Jules Dupuit

April 05, 2008

Southern Nevada Pipelines: Governor Says Okay to SNWA; Another Mega-Subdivision

Nevada Governor Jim Gibbons says he won't block the Southern Nevada Water Authority's (SNWA) plan to build a 250-mile pipeline to tap "unused" ground water in rural Nevada. Read about it at KOLO-TV.

From the story:

"It's part of the overall solution," he [Gov. Gibbons] told reporters at his Las Vegas office. "It's part of lessening our dependence on a single source of water in this region."

By 2015, the Southern Nevada Water Authority hopes to begin pumping groundwater from rural parts of Clark, Lincoln and White Pine counties and piping it about 250 miles to Las Vegas. The project is expected to cost up to $3.5 billion.

State Engineer Tracy Taylor recently completed hearings and is due to make a decision in several months about whether to let the water authority draw billions of gallons of water for the project.

Proponents say they're entitled to the water, while opponents raise the specter of catastrophic environmental damage.

SNWA General Manager Pat Mulroy hailed Gibbons' comments as acknowledgment that southern Nevada needs to tap water to bolster current supplies and serve future growth.

Gibbons also talked about the pipeline project during a speech Thursday morning at the annual Las Vegas Perspective business forum in Las Vegas.

The governor said drought has sharpened the search for more water for the region.

"Ensuring the long-term vitality of southern Nevada's economy is not so much about finding new water sources to support future growth, but rather, decreasing the region's dependence on the Colorado River as its sole source of water," he said.

Gibbons' comments about the project came after he met privately in Las Vegas last month with water authority administrators for what one described as a "comprehensive briefing" on the pipeline and other water issues.

And, in more Southern Nevada water news: Reno businessman Harvey Whittemore urged State Engineer Tracy Taylor to approve his request to build a pipeline to supply water (12,000 acre-feet) to his planned $30B subdivison 50 miles north of Las Vegas. The subdivision will be built in Coyote Springs, with water to be pumped from Lake Valley, where most of the land is owned by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). Lake Valley is about 100 miles north of the planned project.

Read more at KOLO-TV.

No end in sight.

"All things considered, I'd rather be in Philadelphia." -- W.C. Fields

April 02, 2008

Report: Twelve Alternatives to Colorado River Water

The 31 March 2008 Las Vegas Review-Journal reported on a study performed for the Southern Nevada Water Authority (SNWA) that identifed 12 alternatives to Colorado River water.

The accompanying map from the LVRJ article shows the various alternatives. Some are quite "exotic", such as diverting water from the Mississippi, Snake, or other rivers, towing icebergs or otherwise obtaining water from Alaska.

What, no water from Canada or the Great Lakes?

From the article by Henry Brean:

Bill Rinne, director of surface water resources for the SNWA, said he took two things away from the report: All options are still on the table, and none of them seem to provide the perfect solution.

"I don't see a real silver bullet," he said.

The $750,000 report, paid for by the Southern Nevada Water Authority and compiled by an outside panel of experts, was delivered to Secretary of Interior Dirk Kempthorne last week.

Water managers in the seven Western states that share the Colorado will use the findings to help them decide which of the 12 options to pursue first and when.

Rinne said he expects those talks to begin before the end of the year.

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The options range from a low of $20-$30 per acre-foot for cloud seeding to over $4,000 per acre-foot. The report said that cloud seeding could add up to 1.4 million acre-feet to the river.

The article continues:

Rinne said the problem with cloud seeding comes when you try to quantify exactly how much additional water the process may have produced.

"There is always a debate about that," he said.

The report concludes that a significant amount of water, perhaps as much as 150,000 acre-feet, could be saved by removing salt cedar groves along the banks of the river and its tributaries.

Left unchecked, the nonnative plant could spread from its current range of about 300,000 acres to 600,000 acres by 2020, siphoning as much as 1 million acre-feet more from the river in the process.

The study states that water from the Columbia River could be supplied via an undersea pipeline, or that icebergs or fresh water contained in "baggies" could be towed from Alaska. Rinne said that this passes the "straight-face test"

The report notes that Nevada has no large agricultural operations from which to transfer water rights to urban use, or an oceanfront for desalination plants. How about desalting saline or brackish ground water?

Rinne said the report is a "very good and important first step" in managing the Colorado's water amid climate change, drought, and population growth.

"Imagination is more important than knowledge." -- Albert Einstein

April 01, 2008

'To The Last Drop': Water War Between Texas and New Mexico

Lastdropsticker_zr7x Andrew Wice sent me this notice about his forthcoming novel (it came on April 1). It's about a real water war between Texas and New Mexico.

The image is the Zia Crossbones, the symbol of the New Mexican resistance after Texas invades.

Here is what his WWW site says:

When a slacker biologist accidentally discovers water in the parched desert of   New Mexico, a war erupts. 

Texas invades New Mexico, renaming the territory "New Texas."   

A desperate insurgency fights the occupation with a brutal terror campaign in the cites, mountains and deserts.
  To The Last Drop dramatizes today's  global water crisis.  This novel illuminates the development of the Southwest, the relationship between occupation and terrorism, and our unquenchable thirst for water.

Wait a minute, Andrew - a 'slacker biologist' discovers water in the parched desert of New Mexico? That'll curry favor with us hydrologists. But then again, this is a novel.
You can download Part 1 at his WWW site.
It goes on sale 21 April 2008. I'll give it a read.

"Sometimes I think war is God's way of teaching us geography." -- Paul Rodriguez

March 25, 2008

Why No Salmon in the Sacramento?

BaseMuch has been made of and said about the dismal adult chinook salmon run predicted this year for the Sacramento River, normally the second-most productive salmon river (after the mighty Columbia River) on the USA's west coast. There is widespread belief that the Pacific chinook salmon commerical fishing will be shut down this year along all of California and most of Oregon.

Scientists are still not certain why the adult salmon run is expected to be around 63,000, down from almost 900,000  just a five years ago. Here is Jane Kay's article from the San Francisco Chronicle in which she attempts to explain why the run is so low this year.

Amid growing concern over an imminent shutdown of the commercial and sport chinook salmon season, scientists are struggling to figure out why the largest run on the West Coast hit rock bottom and what Californians can do to bring it back.

The chinook salmon - born in the rivers, growing in the bay and ocean, and returning to home rivers to spawn - need two essential conditions early in life to prosper: safe passage through the rivers to the bay and lots of seafood to eat once they reach the ocean.

Yet, the Sacramento River run of salmon that was expected to fill fish markets in May didn't find those life-sustaining conditions. And some scientists say that's the likeliest explanation for why the number of returning spawners plummeted last fall to roughly 90,000, about 10 percent of the peak reached just a few years ago.

The devastating one-two punch happened as the water projects in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta pumped record amounts of snowmelt and rainwater to farms and cities in Southern California, degrading the salmon's habitat. And once the chinook reached the ocean, they couldn't find the food they needed to survive where and when they needed it.

"You need good conditions in the rivers and ocean to get survival and good returns for spawning," said Stephen Ralston, supervisory research fisheries biologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, or NOAA, and a science adviser to the Pacific Fisheries Management Council (PFMC).

It is easy to blame the reduction on the reduced river flows. But Jerry Johns of the California Department of Water Resources (DWR) says there are other factors.

"You can't just simply blame it on the pumps," he said. Ocean conditions, a reduction of phytoplankton in the bay, the amount of salmon fishing, natural die-off and other factors are part of the broader picture, he said.

Johns is correct; you need good ocean conditions in addition to good freshwater conditions, and apparently, those have not been there.

According to Peter Moyle [professor at UC-Davis], good ocean conditions can somewhat make up for drought in the river systems and vice versa. But ocean conditions have been "squirrelly" in the last several years with a number of anomalies that produced abnormally warm conditions not good for salmon, he said.

"Usually, salmon populations are at their worst when conditions are bad in both fresh water and salt water," Moyle said. Some scientists think that is what happened to the 2007 fall run.

Once in the ocean, salmon must gorge on small sea creatures to survive.

In 2005 and 2006, the years that the 2007 fall run needed food near the shore in the Gulf of the Farallones, the upwelling of nutrients apparently came too late to produce the small fish that feed the salmon.

For more explanations see this article by Tom Stienstra, and this editorial, both from the 23 March 20o8 San Francisco Chronicle.

"Let us consider an alternative style of thinking, which we can call 'creative thinking'. It is playfully instructive to note that the word 'reactive' and 'creative' are made up of exactly the same letters. The only difference between the two is that you 'C' [see] differently." -- John Quincy Adams

March 22, 2008

TV Special on Las Vegas Water

Happy World Water Day!

For those of you in Las Vegas on 22-23 March 2008, you might tune to Channel 8, the CBS affiliate, for its special "Crossfire: Water, Power, and Politics". It will be broadcast at 9-10 PM, and also on 23 March on Channel 19 at 2:30 AM, 1:30 PM, and 10 PM.

Very apropos to World Water Day.

I'd like to see it, but I question how much can be done in just an hour. Here is a description of the show (story on Channel 8's WWW site; you can also view the show here in 7 segments):

On Saturday, there will be an Eyewitness News I-Team special titled "Crossfire: Water, Power, and Politics."