Colorado River Stalemate Deepens: Seven States Miss Second Deadline on Water Cuts

By Matthias Binder
States reliant on Colorado River fail to meet the latest deadline to find consensus (Featured Image)

Governors Demand Upper Basin Step Up (Image Credits: Unsplash)

The seven Western states that rely on the Colorado River let another key deadline pass without reaching an agreement on managing future shortages.[1][2]

Governors Demand Upper Basin Step Up

Governors from Arizona, California and Nevada issued a joint statement Saturday, urging their Upper Basin counterparts to make greater concessions amid ongoing talks.

Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs, California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Nevada Gov. Joe Lombardo emphasized recent conservation efforts by their states. “The Colorado River is essential to our communities and economies, and our states have conserved large volumes of water in recent years to stabilize the basin’s water supplies for years to come,” the governors stated. “Our stance remains firm and fair: all seven basin states must share in the responsibility of conservation.”[1]

The Lower Basin trio proposed significant reductions in their allocations:

  • Arizona: 27% cut
  • California: 10% cut
  • Nevada: 17% cut

Negotiators previously missed a November target set by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation for a post-2026 strategy.[2]

Frustration Mounts from Key Figures

Colorado Sen. John Hickenlooper highlighted the urgency, describing the basin’s outlook as “dire” due to low snowpack levels. “If we don’t address this problem together – head-on and fast – our communities, farms, and economies will suffer. The best path forward is the one we take together. Litigation won’t solve the problem of this long-term aridification,” he said in a statement.[1]

John Entsminger, general manager of the Southern Nevada Water Authority, voiced similar concerns. “The actions we have taken over the past two-plus decades are less about raising Lake Mead’s elevation than they are about protecting ourselves if things go from bad to worse,” Entsminger noted.[2]

Discussions among the states have dragged on for more than two years without resolution.

A Lifeline for Millions Under Threat

More than 40 million people in the U.S., along with communities in Mexico and Native American tribes, depend on the Colorado River for water, agriculture and power generation.

Major urban centers draw heavily from the waterway. Cities such as Denver, Salt Lake City, Albuquerque, Las Vegas, Phoenix and Los Angeles all consume substantial volumes. The Upper Basin states – Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming – rely on mountain snowmelt but use less overall, while the Lower Basin supports vast agricultural operations.

Chronic overuse, prolonged drought and warming temperatures have steadily reduced flows. The foundational 1922 Colorado River Compact assumed higher water availability that no longer matches reality.

Record-Low Snowpack Raises Alarms

Western snow cover reached its lowest depths in decades this winter, with some regions recording their warmest December through early February periods.

The National Snow and Ice Data Center reported current snow spanning just 155,000 square miles – roughly the size of California – compared to a typical 460,000 square miles across California, Utah, Idaho and Montana combined.

Reservoirs like Lake Mead and Lake Powell continue to decline, underscoring the basin’s vulnerability.

Federal Intervention Looms Large

Without a deal, the federal government may impose its own management plan, potentially sparking lawsuits among dissatisfied parties.

The Bureau of Reclamation set the recent deadlines to replace expiring guidelines, but states remain divided on cuts and responsibilities.

Key Takeaways

  • Lower Basin states offered up to 27% allocation cuts; Upper Basin seeks more balanced contributions.
  • Negotiations missed November and February deadlines, with talks ongoing since 2023.
  • Low snowpack and shrinking reservoirs threaten 40 million users and agriculture.

As the Colorado River’s challenges intensify, collaborative action grows ever more critical to avert crisis. What steps should these states take next? Share your thoughts in the comments.

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