November-December 2007

Going With the Flow

Improvements along the Platte River Basin are designed to maintain habitats and promote water conservation.

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By Carol Brzozowski

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In coming up with a model to do so, the state identified the sources of all the water use in the South Platte Basin. The state developed a model linking all of the sources to which each of those sectors supplied water. “As you shift from agricultural to urban water use, two basic things happen,” notes Brown. “You get more water in the river because the consumptive use on the urban side is significantly less than the consumptive use for the agriculture side, so on a net basis, for every acre-foot you allocate moved from irrigated agriculture to urban, you actually end up with more return flows into the river.

“That’s a good thing for getting more water down the river to Nebraska for the program, but it also changes the timing of the flows more, and timing actually makes a big difference for the species.”

Colorado developed a tracking system from which grew an approach to take water during the fall and winter months out of the South Platte near the state line with Nebraska and put it into recharge ponds, says Brown. “That recharge comes back through the alluvium into the river, and by designing how far away the ponds are, you can significantly retime the flow in the river to get it to the habitat in Nebraska at the right time,” he says.

Wyoming’s Water Storage Plan
As for Wyoming, its water use is fairly steady, with 90% mainly irrigated agriculture, Brown says. Wyoming will provide the Pathfinder Modification Project, a proposal to raise by a few feet the spillway at Pathfinder Reservoir, a federal reclamation facility. That will capture about 50,000 acre-feet of storage that has been lost over the years to sedimentation in the reservoir. Some of the stored water would be allocated to the program by being moved down the river to Lake McConaughy to be used to maintain flows.

In addition to each state’s water contribution, the program includes money to improve water efficiency by getting more water into the system, including additional storage. Farmers and other water users will most likely be affected by the program to the extent they choose to temporarily lease water to the program in such a way that would be economically advantageous to them to do so. Land could be sold or easements leased or sold for habitat restoration for the same economic advantage. That could potentially reduce 11 million irrigated acres by 6,000 to 17,000 farmed acres in the three states, resulting in an estimated $4 million to $5 million reduction in annual gross crop revenues in the basin.

A negative economic impact could be realized through reductions in crop productions from voluntary water leasing, affecting related agricultural services and supplies. Another impact would be a reduction in recreational activities, such as fishing. Together, positive and negative economic impacts are expected to amount to less than 0.1% of the local economy.  The land aspect of the program entails acquiring, protecting, and restoring 10,000 acres on a 100-mile reach between Lexington and Chapman. Brown says almost 3,000 acres have been identified and bought by Nebraska power districts.

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“What the program will need to do in the next 13 years of the first increment of the program is acquire about 7,000 additional acres of land along the river, through purchase, lease, or easements,” he says.

The area being restored used to be the historic riverbed before the flows were significantly reduced. “Now it’s become filled with trees and vegetation. That isn’t prime agriculture land because it is all sand,” Brown says. “It does tend to get a lot of use from recreation and duck hunters. There is potential that easements could be acquired with various landowners to allow use for restoration of habitat.” Next Page >

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