Colorado River officials explore water conservation credits

In 2023, taxpayers paid farmers and ranchers $16 million to reduce their water usage in the Colorado River Basin.
A proposal aims to address questions about how to track and store conserved water, how to define “conservation credits” and the economic impacts.

Four states in the drought-stricken Colorado River Basin, including Colorado, are exploring the concept of water conservation “credits” to protect against severe drought years, according to reporting by The Colorado Sun. 

In 2023, taxpayers paid farmers and ranchers $16 million to reduce their water usage in the Colorado River Basin. However, the conserved water often reentered streams and was used downstream, raising questions about how to effectively track and store conserved water for future use. Representatives from Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming voted in June to develop a proposal by mid-August to address these concerns. 

Andy Mueller, general manager of the Colorado River District, emphasized the importance of storing conserved water for public purposes rather than allowing it to flow downstream for continued consumption by other states. “If we’re going to conserve water up here, and if the federal government is going to pay for that conservation with taxpayer dollars, it seems to us that storing it and using it for important public purposes makes sense, rather than sending it downstream to just encourage continued consumption of water,” Mueller told The Sun. 

The proposal aims to address questions about how to track and store conserved water, how to define “conservation credits,” and the economic impacts on local communities. This effort is part of broader negotiations over the future management of the Colorado River, which supplies water to 40 million people and faces challenges from warmer temperatures and a prolonged megadrought. 

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