Green Light for Adaptive Policies on the Colorado River
Abstract
The Colorado River is a critical source of water supply for 40 million people in nine states spanning two nations in western North America. Overallocated in the 20th century, its problems have been compounded by climate change in the 21st century. We review the basin’s hydrologic and water management history in order to identify opportunities for adaptive governance to respond to the challenge of reduced system flows and distill the ingredients of past successes. While significant advances have been made in the first two decades of the 21st century, these past actions have not been sufficient to halt the declines in the basin’s reservoirs. We find that the mix of federal, state, and local responsibility creates challenges for adaptation but that progress can be made through a combination of detailed policy option development followed by quick action at hydrologically driven moments of opportunity. The role of directives and deadlines from federal authorities in facilitating difficult compromises is noted. The current state of dramatically decreased overall flows has opened a window of opportunity for the adoption of water management actions that move the river system toward sustainability. Specific measures, based on the existing institutional framework and on policy proposals that have circulated within the Colorado River community, are suggested.
Local Knowledge Graph (28 entities)
Related Works
Items connected by shared entities, co-authorship, citations, or semantic similarity.
Water and Arid Lands of the Western United States
Upper Gunnison River Water Conservancy District Management Plan- 1999-2005 part 2
Proposed Union Park Reservoir Part 4
Controls from above and below: Snow, soil, and steepness drive diverging trends of subsurface water and streamflow dynamics
Agricultural Water Footprints and Productivity in the Colorado River Basin
The Risk of Curtailment under the Colorado River Compact
Recent Upper Colorado River Streamflow Declines Driven by Loss of Spring Precipitation
TNC Fact Sheet: Managing for Change in the Gunnison Basin: Building Resilience
Summary Report: Gunnison Climate Adaptation Pilot Project
Cited 26 times
References (28)
1 in Knowledge Hub, 27 external
