Dead Pools

Dead Pools

David Sparks Ph.D.
David Sparks Ph.D.
On a personal note, I drove my daughter from Iowa to Salt Lake City where she is going to be an investigative reporter on local television. Her biggest concern? She hears via the news that the great Salt Lake is going dry… Fast.

The western United States continues to suffer from a historic level of drought. Wade Crowfoot is the secretary of the California Natural Resources Agency, and he spoke during the Western Food and Ag Issues Summit hosted by Agri-Pulse. He offered up a key example of just how bad the drought has been.

“We are facing a worsening regional drought across most of the American West that's unprecedented in nature. The Colorado River Basin provides water to seven states and two countries. It's been experiencing a drought or water shortage for over 20 years. Apparently, this is the driest 22-year period on record and possibly in 1200 years.”

Further shortages in precipitation in the western United States could be catastrophic for water needs.

“If we experience middling precipitation over the next couple of winters, we could hit dead pool in our two largest reservoirs on the lower Colorado, which are Lake Mead and Lake Powell. Dead pool meaning we wouldn't be able to export any water to the southwest, which would be catastrophic, so this is an unprecedented challenge in the Colorado River Basin. Go further to the north. The two major river systems that we depend on for a lot of our water in California, the Sacramento River system and the San Joaquin River system, are in a very bad way.”

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