A New Day on the Colorado
A decades-long dispute has eased with the signing of the Seven States Agreement to better manage the Colorado River
By Garry Hofer
Sometimes, simple problems require complex solutions.
At their core, troubles surrounding the Colorado River are straightforward. Eric Kuhn, general manager of the Colorado River Water Conservation District, summed it up at an August 2006 meeting in Breckenridge, Colorado: “The problem is simple, with nine million acre-feet a year [going] in and 10 million acre-feet a year out, the system will ultimately go bankrupt or, in our case, Lake Mead will empty.”
However, the solution to this problem has eluded federal and state officials, and the states that have relied on the river and its reservoirs for their urban and agricultural water supplies, recreation and power generation for decades.
As the late water author Marc Reisner noted, the Colorado River carries the infamous distinction of being the most litigated river in the world.