Coalition for Colorado River
Published on by Water Network Research, Official research team of The Water Network in Government
A New Coalition, Colorado River Connected, Has Been Formed to Protect Colorado's Headwaters
A coalition of groups from across the West today announced the formation of a new coalition to inform and engage communities in California, Nevada, Arizona, and other western states about threats posed to the Colorado River and their water supply.
Colorado River Connected was formed to protect the headwaters of the Colorado River system for the benefit of the 35 million people and thousands of species and natural communities that rely upon it. Currently, the coalition includes Colorado Riverkeeper, Utah Rivers United, Sierra Club, Utah Physicians for a Healthy Environment, Los Angeles Waterkeeper, Glen Canyon Institute, Save the Colorado, and Waterkeeper Alliance. The coalition is inviting hundreds of watershed and community groups to this effort to protect and stand up for a healthy Colorado River.
The Colorado River originates in Utah, Colorado and Wyoming, which is the source of drinking water for millions of people in cities including Las Vegas, Tucson, Phoenix, Los Angeles and San Diego. However, the river is threatened by unprecedented dirty energy development, voracious water diversions, and climate change.
Climate scientists have acknowledged for decades that the Southwest will suffer more than many areas of the U.S. as a changing climate lowers snowpack and increases
temperatures. In recent years, the Southwest has been gripped by a significant drought, although most residents of California, Nevada, Arizona and New Mexico are not aware of proposed water diversions upstream that are being pursued alongside an increase in pollutiongenerating energy development from tar sands, fracking, and oil shale.
Colorado River Connected is working to engage and activate residents living in downstream urban areas to raise a collective, basinwide voice to prevent devastating projects that will further drain and pollute the Colorado Basin.
"This drought has shown that residents in Phoenix, Las Vegas and Southern California are likely to be heavily impacted by new water diversions proposed upstream, like Utah's Lake Powell Pipeline," said Zach Frankel, Executive Director of the Utah Rivers Council. "That's enough water for nearly one million people's use for a year and it's going to impact everything and everyone downstream," said Frankel.
Thousands of proposed new oil and gas wells are likely to pollute precious water supplies.
"Whether you're a San Diego mom, a Tucson water manager, or a Las Vegas doctor, if you're drinking water from the Colorado River, you better pay attention to what is going on in Utah and Colorado," said Tim Wagner, Executive Director of Utah Physicians for a Healthy Environment. "Between an explosion in fracking for gas and oil, and Utah's love affair with tar sands and oil shale, the Southwest's water supply is threatened like never before."
Colorado River Connected aims to bring the citizens of the basin together to speak with a unified voice for communities who rely on Colorado River water, and to push back against states like Utah and Colorado that are only looking at the Colorado River for continued development and dirty energy projects. Colorado River Connected will press for changes in water management and seek policies that acknowledge and address these threats for the good of residents and the Colorado River Watershed.
Source: Colorado River Connected
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