Saving The Colorado River - Are We Doing Too Little, Too Late?
On Monday, May 24, 2021, I departed Monument Valley for Kanab, Utah, via Page, Arizona.  The weather was clear, with only a light breeze. Page, Arizona owes its current  existence to the nearby  Glen Canyon Dam and its reservoir, inaptly named “Lake  Powell”.
 Loved by power boaters but decried by environmentalists since its  
completion in the mid-1960s, both the dam and the “lake” are 
anachronistic  constructs of 20th century groupthink. To justify its 
initial construction, dam  advocates and the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation 
(USBR) had touted the proposed dam as a flood  control mechanism.
Later, those running the dam’s  electrical
 generators switched  to promoting its ability to produce electricity 
from a supposedly renewable  resource. Current lake levels would suggest
 otherwise. By 2023, the hydro-power  intake structures will stand above
 the projected lake level. In other words, the  dam will likely create 
no hydro-power at all.
electrical
 generators switched  to promoting its ability to produce electricity 
from a supposedly renewable  resource. Current lake levels would suggest
 otherwise. By 2023, the hydro-power  intake structures will stand above
 the projected lake level. In other words, the  dam will likely create 
no hydro-power at all.
As of 2021, drought and structural overdrawing of Colorado River water
  supplies have made a mockery of the Glen Canyon Dam and its rapidly 
shrinking  reservoir. The Upper Colorado River Basin is in such extreme 
drought that the  prospects of a catastrophic flood are near zero. As 
for the power boaters, most  of their launch ramps now look like ski 
jumps, with a long drop-offs to the rocks  below. The lake itself is so 
much smaller, snags, unseen sandbars and lack  of beaches for camping 
make the boating experience more hazardous each  year. Shorelines of 
quicksand and  gravel
 bars not seen in over fifty years will  consume the unwary. Lake Powell
 is fast approaching its all-time low water mark  and is unlikely to 
rebound in the next decade or two.
gravel
 bars not seen in over fifty years will  consume the unwary. Lake Powell
 is fast approaching its all-time low water mark  and is unlikely to 
rebound in the next decade or two.
In November 2019, the  Navajo Generating Station
 (NGS) near Page, Arizona ceased operations. If  anyone thought that 
Glen Canyon Dam and Lake Powell were cynical constructs of  20th century
 infrastructure, they should study the development and ultimate  demise 
of the coal fired NGS. Owned by the Salt River Project, the largest  
public utility in the State of Arizona, the main purpose of NGS was to  create electricity to pump Colorado River water over five mountain ranges to  Phoenix and Tucson, Arizona.
 To power the three huge furnaces at NGS, miners extracted and shipped coal from  the Black Mesa Complex,  near Kayenta, Arizona. Black Mesa lies above what used to be the largest aquifer  in the Navajo Nation.
  Contemporaneous with the NGS, unscrupulous power brokers had tapped 
that aquifer  to send a slurry of coal to a now defunct power plant at Laughlin, Nevada.
  Peabody Coal and its successor corporations operated the Black Mesa 
Mine on  contract to the Navajo Nation. In exchange for some transitory 
jobs and revenue, the Navajo  received a strip-mined mesa and the 
despoilment of their precious water  resources. As a concession to the 
Navajo, the mine offered free coal for home  heating each year. Since 
many Navajo households have no electricity, the foul  and deadly coal 
was their only heat source during the winter. To add insult to  injury, 
the Navajo had to line up with their personal pickup trucks and trailers
  to cart off the "free coal".
To power the three huge furnaces at NGS, miners extracted and shipped coal from  the Black Mesa Complex,  near Kayenta, Arizona. Black Mesa lies above what used to be the largest aquifer  in the Navajo Nation.
  Contemporaneous with the NGS, unscrupulous power brokers had tapped 
that aquifer  to send a slurry of coal to a now defunct power plant at Laughlin, Nevada.
  Peabody Coal and its successor corporations operated the Black Mesa 
Mine on  contract to the Navajo Nation. In exchange for some transitory 
jobs and revenue, the Navajo  received a strip-mined mesa and the 
despoilment of their precious water  resources. As a concession to the 
Navajo, the mine offered free coal for home  heating each year. Since 
many Navajo households have no electricity, the foul  and deadly coal 
was their only heat source during the winter. To add insult to  injury, 
the Navajo had to line up with their personal pickup trucks and trailers
  to cart off the "free coal".
 Although
 the mine and the NGS did provide some jobs for Navajo tribal members,  
the true legacy of the NGS was polluted groundwater and air throughout 
the Four Corners Region. For over forty years, visitors to the nearby  Grand Canyon
 often looked  down on a smokey pit, not the natural wonder they came to
 see. At one time, the  NGS was the largest producer of airborne 
nitrogen oxide in the United States.  Only far cheaper electricity 
provided by natural gas and renewable sources  doomed the NGS.
Although
 the mine and the NGS did provide some jobs for Navajo tribal members,  
the true legacy of the NGS was polluted groundwater and air throughout 
the Four Corners Region. For over forty years, visitors to the nearby  Grand Canyon
 often looked  down on a smokey pit, not the natural wonder they came to
 see. At one time, the  NGS was the largest producer of airborne 
nitrogen oxide in the United States.  Only far cheaper electricity 
provided by natural gas and renewable sources  doomed the NGS. 
When Arizona won a larger share of Colorado River water in federal 
lawsuits  during the 1960s, the largest user of water in Southern 
Arizona was agriculture.  Pima cotton got its name from Pima County, 
where Tucson now boasts a population  of over one million residents. In 
the days when cotton was king, Phoenix,  Arizona had a population of 
under 600,000. Today,  Greater .jpg) Phoenix
 has a  population of 4.485 million. As agriculture subsided, the vast 
and thirsty  megalopolis of Phoenix/Tucson grew in its place.
Phoenix
 has a  population of 4.485 million. As agriculture subsided, the vast 
and thirsty  megalopolis of Phoenix/Tucson grew in its place.
A little-known fact about the NGS was its thirst. During its 45-years of
  operation, it was the single largest consumer of water from Lake 
Powell. It also  used over ten percent of its electrical power 
generation to transport coal via  rail and to pump its cooling water 
from Lake Powell. Looking back, the NGS stole  water from the Navajos 
and wasted that precious water to power itself and its electric  trains.
 To complete the circle of complicity, Arizona built its current wealth 
 on the false premise of abundant water, pumped from an unsustainable 
water  supply. Like a science fiction monster, the NGS laid waste to 
water and land  while using profligate amounts of energy to power 
itself. For 45-years, the NGS  wasted water, power and environmental 
resources, all in the name of “progress”.
By 2021 and prior to the major delivery cutbacks to come, Arizona had banked  about two years of water supply in  shallow desert aquifers. Most of it is near  the
 Palo Verde Nuclear Generating Station, west of Phoenix. With the water 
table  so close to the surface, water samples there can register over 
80-f degrees. To stave  off potential water shortages, construction 
crews are installing pumps and  delivery systems from those aquifers to 
north Phoenix. For as long as that water  bank lasts, Phoenix can 
continue to pretend that it has an adequate supply of  water. When it 
becomes obvious that supplies will tighten, expect land values in  more 
recent suburbs, like Anthem Arizona to experience a major slump in 
housing  prices. Water may soon become too expensive or scarce to supply
 all who want it.
When the reservoir downstream from Lake Powell, which is Lake Meade 
reaches its  official drought emergency level in August 2021, Arizona 
and Nevada will take the deepest  cuts in future water deliveries. With 
unending drought
 and decreased flows in  both the Upper Colorado Basin (Lake Powell) and
 the Lower Colorado River Basin  (Lake Mead), there is no guarantee of 
sufficient water in either or both basins  to supply basic water needs 
to the 40 million people in the Southwest who depend on it. Although  
Arizona and Nevada will take the biggest initial cut in water 
deliveries, the  entire region is likely to experience extreme shortages
 in the next decade.
The history of water politics in the West is one of over optimism and 
faulty  projections. Instead of inaction and dithering as the West dries
 up and blows  away, both the federal government and the states that 
make up the Colorado River  Compact should take bold action. Each year, Lake Powell losses up to fifteen percent of its  volume to evaporation and percolation into its sandstone basin.  The  USBR should immediately  decommission Lake Powell. They should then  conduct a controlled release of water from  Lake Powell
 into the Colorado River.  When that still substantial volume of water 
reaches Lake Mead, it will then  occupy a smaller geographical 
“footprint”. Unlike the substantial percolation at  Lake Powell, Lake 
Mead’s granite lined basin will retain much more of its  received water.
The  USBR should immediately  decommission Lake Powell. They should then  conduct a controlled release of water from  Lake Powell
 into the Colorado River.  When that still substantial volume of water 
reaches Lake Mead, it will then  occupy a smaller geographical 
“footprint”. Unlike the substantial percolation at  Lake Powell, Lake 
Mead’s granite lined basin will retain much more of its  received water.
How would these bold moves affect the Colorado River and its water 
consumers?  First, Page Arizona would decline in population, back to 
near its size before  construction of the Glen Canyon Dam. Power boaters
 would have to travel to a more  viable Lake Mead, farther downstream. 
As Lake Powell recedes, river runners  could once again conduct rafting 
tours of the actual Glen Canyon. For the first  time in over fifty 
years, hardy tourists could visit the most spectacular  ecosystem ever 
destroyed by a desert reservoir. In time, Glen Canyon would  recover, 
and the “Eden of the  Desert” could well become a greater draw than the  transitory “lake”. With luck and realistic planning, Phoenix,  Las Vegas and even  Los Angeles could survive, albeit on a much tighter water budget.
Desert” could well become a greater draw than the  transitory “lake”. With luck and realistic planning, Phoenix,  Las Vegas and even  Los Angeles could survive, albeit on a much tighter water budget.
On the bright side, Page Arizona could become both a rafting and a 
mining  center, quarrying desert sandstone for use in xeriscape 
throughout California,  Arizona and Nevada. Personally, I would be happy
 to repopulate my Southern  California front yard with succulents and 
cacti, interspersed among expanses of  “Navajo Sandstone”. As I write this in  August 2021, my plan sounds harsh. In 2022  and beyond, it may sound like “too little and too late”.
This concludes Part Three of a Five-Part Article. To read Part Four, click  HERE. To return to Part One, click  HERE  
By James McGillis at 01:47 PM | Colorado River | Comments (1) | Link

No comments:
Post a Comment