One would be hard pressed to find a river more important to a region than the Lower Colorado.
The river provides drinking water for nearly 30 million people from Las Vegas to Phoenix to Los Angeles. It irrigates millions of acres of farmland, growing the vast majority of our nation’s winter vegetables in places like Yuma, Arizona and California’s Imperial Valley. All told, if the river disappeared today, the United States would lose hundreds of billions of dollars in annual economic output.
While the river is not going to disappear, there is a very real possibility that over the next several years, water deliveries will be cut to some users because we collectively use more water than the river can provide. It is also likely that water availability will continue to decline due to rising temperatures caused by climate change. Even incremental cuts to water supply will have a huge impact on the environment and the regional economy. For example, in the event of a shortage, initial cuts would take water from Arizona’s agriculture industry, forcing farmers to either fallow their land or increase groundwater pumping to water their crops. Further cuts would literally dry up most of Central Arizona agriculture. Many aquifers across the state are already depleted, and when the groundwater goes, so does the desert environment, biodiversity, and quality of life.
Some may ask, why list the Lower Colorado River when it’s hardly a river; most of it has been piped, diverted, or dammed? Or some may say, why focus on this threat when clean water, public lands, and our bedrock environmental laws are under attack? The answers to these questions are straight forward – the river is too important, and the consequences to the environment and the economy are too severe – if we do not continue the progress made to address the water imbalance by Arizona, California, Nevada, the Federal Government, and others through agreements like the Drought Contingency Plan (DCP) and the Drought Contingency Plan “Plus” (two key collaborative agreements currently in negotiation) in Arizona. While there are many legitimate and combative environmental public policy debates happening in the country right now, water is a non-partisan issue.
If efforts like the DCP are going to be successful in the long term, it is essential that diverse voices are engaged in Colorado River issues. This is why the Hispanic Access Foundation has partnered with American Rivers on this year’s Most Endangered Rivers report. Two years ago, the Hispanic Access Foundation and American Rivers produced a short film called Soy Rojo which screened at dozens of churches throughout the Colorado River Basin. Powerful voices within the Latino Faith community emerged from these screenings, highlighting the cultural, spiritual, and economic importance of the Colorado River to Latino communities from Colorado to California. We are proud to partner with the Hispanic Access Foundation on this listing and on our second film together – Milk and Honey – which tells the story of one communities’ connection to the Colorado River near Yuma, Arizona.
Our 2017 America’s Most Endangered Rivers report highlighting the Lower Colorado river illustrates the need for us all to come together, whether you live in Yuma or New York, to develop and promote smart solutions to our most urgent river issues. By working together, and with support of leadership at all levels, we can sustain the Lower Colorado River that works so hard for all of us.
As originally published in American Rivers By Matt Rice on June 23, 2017
Original URL: https://www.americanrivers.org/2017/06/lower-colorado-endangered-river/