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Throughout the history of the American West, water issues have shown their ability to both unite and divide communities. As an imbalance between water supplies and demands grows in the region, KUNC is committed to covering the stories that emerge.

Hydropower Worries Grow As Colorado River Reservoirs Keep Dropping

Bureau of Reclamation Glen Canyon Dam manager, Bob Martin, stands on a ledge overlooking the Colorado River as it leaves Lake Powell.
Luke Runyon
/
KUNC
Bureau of Reclamation Glen Canyon Dam manager, Bob Martin, stands on a ledge overlooking the Colorado River as it leaves Lake Powell.

The water levels behind the Colorado River’s biggest dams are fast-approaching or already at record lows. The historic 21-year megadrought that is squeezing some Western states’ water supplies will also likely start showing up in energy bills, because those dams can’t produce as much electricity.

The problem is most acute at the Upper Colorado River basin’s largest reservoir: Lake Powell. At the base of Glen Canyon Dam in northern Arizona, the Colorado River flows out cold and clear. On the canyon walls, moss grows where water from behind the dam seeps slowly through the red sandstone. The air buzzes with electricity.

“If money had a sound, this would be it,” Bob Martin said of the electrical hum. He’s the dam’s manager for the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation.

“You can hear the electricity,” he said. “It's keeping the lights on at businesses, the AC on at your home, power to the hospitals, you name it. It’s really a backbone of our society now.”

Transmission lines from Glen Canyon Dam's powerhouse run from the base of the dam to the top of the canyon.
Luke Runyon
/
KUNC
Transmission lines from Glen Canyon Dam's powerhouse run from the base of the dam to the top of the canyon.

Above our hardhats, thick, metal transmission lines run from its powerhouse to towers on top of the canyon. When heat waves scorch the West, as they have this year, Martin says the dam can release more water to meet the ramped up energy demands in places like Colorado Springs, Mesa, Arizona, St. George, Utah and the Navajo Nation. Many rural electrical cooperatives in the Colorado River basin also rely on Glen Canyon, and hydropower generated at smaller dams in Utah, Colorado and New Mexico.

“When the sun goes down and it's still hot and the wind's not blowing and you still have demand on the grid, people running their air conditioning, that power has to come from somewhere,” Martin said. “That's the benefit of hydropower is that we can turn on power within minutes to put it on the grid.”

Lake Powell is the nation’s second largest reservoir. Later in July it’s projected to hit its lowest point since it first filled in the 1960s, set to drop below its previous low set in 2005. The reservoir’s level is currently at 3,557 feet above sea level. It’s projected to drop to 3,515 feet by next spring. At an elevation of 3,490 feet, hydropower production at the dam is no longer possible. Warming temperatures from climate change, and the West’s inability to conserve, are to blame.

Inside the dam, water moves through generators to churn out power for 5 million people in seven Western states: Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming, Colorado and Nebraska. As the lake declines, its power production does too, because there’s less water pressure to drive the turbines. The pressure that builds behind a dam and makes generators more efficient is called hydraulic head.

Generators produce hydropower inside Glen Canyon Dam in northern Arizona.
Luke Runyon
/
KUNC
Generators produce hydropower inside Glen Canyon Dam in northern Arizona.

With a coming shortage declaration from the federal government and restrictions on water deliveries spelled out in the river’s 2007 interim guidelines, Glen Canyon Dam will pass less water in 2022, and do so with less hydraulic head, meaning its overall hydropower production is set to decline even further.

Hydropower production at Glen Canyon has dropped about 16% and its capacity has decreased about 20% since the year 2000.

Inflows to Powell from the Colorado and San Juan rivers this year are among the three lowest on record, at 24% of the long-term average. Downstream demands and longstanding agreements among the basin states will push Powell to an historic low, with no relief in sight. Similar declines at Hoover Dam are also happening.

“Even with efficiency improvements, impacts to hydropower generation are anticipated to continue,” Bureau of Reclamation hydrologists wrote in “Current projections for hydropower generation at Hoover Dam indicate that there is a relatively high probability of a 0.5 percent to 2.5 percent reduction in hydropower generation from year to year over the next 5 years.”

“It's not sustainable to continue to release that volume of water when you have not that much coming in,” Martin said.

The declining water levels have sent those who market and distribute Colorado River basin hydropower to their customers to figure out how to make up the energy deficit.

“It's a difficult conversation in the sense that all we have to deliver is bad news,” said Clayton Palmer, with the Western Area Power Administration, or WAPA. The agency distributes and markets the Glen Canyon Dam’s power.

With the lake on the decline, Palmer said this year his agency will have to purchase millions of dollars in extra electrical power on the open market to fulfill their contracts.

“Conversations with our customers have been centered on how much less should you deliver or how much more should you raise your price?” Palmer said.

Lake Powell is approaching a record low point, as the Colorado River basin warms due to climate change.
Luke Runyon
/
KUNC
Lake Powell is approaching a record low point, as the Colorado River basin warms due to climate change.

WAPA has already started the process to raise its rates by 14% for at least the next two years. What makes it even harder to plan, Palmer said, is that no one is sure how bad things might get if the dry and hot conditions continue.

“Is this a set of years that are drier, which will be followed by a set of years which are wetter?” he said. “Or has there been a systematic change in climate and hydrology in the Colorado River basin such that we should expect these conditions to be the new normal in the case of hydropower?”

Even with 2021’s historic lows, the Colorado River’s dams are still generating hydropower. What’s uncertain is what another year as dry as this one could do to power production in the watershed.

“I think it's been described as a slow-moving train wreck,” said Eric Kuhn, the former general manager of the Colorado River District. “Because it's taken us 22 years to go from full to where we are.”

Kuhn says it takes a series of back-to-back dry years to put the river’s power production in jeopardy. Lake Powell has now seen two in a row. One more could set in motion a complete loss of hydropower at the reservoir.

“I'd say there's a 40 to 50% chance that in the winter of 2023, we could see Lake Powell levels drawn down to at or below minimum power,” Kuhn said.

None of this should come as a surprise, said Eric Balken of the Glen Canyon Institute, a Utah-based environmental group.

“I think for a lot of people, the writing's on the wall,” he said.

Balken’s group advocates drawing down Lake Powell on purpose, letting its water flow downstream . The Colorado River system now should be managed for one giant reservoir, not two, Balken said. Environmental groups have called for draining the lake for decades; they see its dam as a symbol of the West’s water excesses. Without the reservoir, Balken’s group wants to see Glen Canyon restored.

And even if water managers don’t actively choose to let go of Lake Powell, climate change could end up doing it for them, he said.

“The Lake Powell we knew in the ‘80s and ‘90s probably isn't coming back,” Balken said. “And as far as the climate data goes, you don't have to be a mathematician to see the trend line.”

Climate scientists say temperatures are likely to keep rising, putting strains on not just the region’s water supply, but its energy grid too.

This story is part of ongoing coverage of the Colorado River, produced by KUNC in Colorado and supported by the Walton Family Foundation.

As KUNC’s managing editor and reporter covering the Colorado River Basin, I dig into stories that show how water issues can both unite and divide communities throughout the Western U.S. I edit and produce feature stories for KUNC and a network of public media stations in Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, New Mexico, Arizona, California and Nevada.
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