The three lower basin states of California, Arizona, and Nevada are proposing a plan to voluntarily conserve a major portion of their allocation of Colorado River water in exchange for more than $1 billion in federal funds. The emergency plan is focused on retaining sufficient water levels in both Lake Powell and Lake Mead to ensure that hydropower operations at the sites can continue.
According to reporting by the Washington Post, the three lower basin states are discussing cutting back about 3 million acre-feet of water over the next three years, reductions that will be paid for primarily using funds from the Inflation Reduction Act.
While issues remain, state officials appear more united than ever to finalize a deal on their own before a May 30 deadline after which the federal government will decide how states will cut their water use by 2 to 4 million acre-feet per year, up to one-third of the entire average annual flow. If finalized, a deal would be the culmination of nearly a year of negotiations among the seven Western states that share the Colorado River.
Lawmakers introduce bill to end speculative oil and gas leasing
Nevada Senator Catherine Cortez Masto and Representative Susie Lee reintroduced the End Speculative Oil and Gas Leasing Act of 2023 on Tuesday. The bill would require the Bureau of Land Management to assess the actual oil and gas development potential of BLM lands before any leasing could occur, and would ban future oil and gas leasing on most U.S. public lands that have low or no potential to produce oil. “The BLM is wasting time, money, and resources leasing land to oil and gas companies that we know has little actual potential for development,” said Senator Cortez Masto.
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