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Last modified
1/26/2010 2:48:05 PM
Creation date
10/12/2006 2:58:24 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Water Supply Protection
File Number
8200.760
Description
Yampa River General
State
CO
Basin
Yampa/White
Water Division
6
Date
3/1/1993
Author
Hydrosphere
Title
Yampa River Basin - Alternatives Feasibility Study - Final Report
Water Supply Pro - Doc Type
Report/Study
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<br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br /> <br />1)62323 <br /> <br />Executive Summary <br /> <br />climatological variation, Annual precipitation ranges from more than 40 inches in the high <br />alpine zones in the east and south to negligible amounts in the more arid western portion of the <br />basin, <br /> <br />There are 23 currently operating streamflow gages in the Yampa River basin, 15 of <br />which are in Colorado above the confluence of the Yampa and Little Snake Rivers, Another <br />60 gages have operated over various periods in the past but have been discontinued. Of all <br />these gages, only the Steamboat Springs and Maybell gages on the Yampa River mainstem <br />encompass the 1930 through 1982 hydrologic period used in this study. Figure S-1 <br />schematically depicts the distribution of flows and depletions in the Yampa River basin above <br />the Little Snake River confluence. <br /> <br />Water Rights <br /> <br />The waters of the Colorado River basin have been apportioned for use between the upper <br />and lower basin states by the Colorado River Compact of 1922. The upper basin allocation has <br />been further apportioned among the states of Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, and <br />Wyoming by the Upper Colorado River Basin Compact of 1948, Article XIII of the Upper <br />Basin Compact specifically addresses the apportionment of water of the Yampa River between <br />Colorado and Utah, stipulating that Colorado will not cause the Yampa River at the Maybell <br />gaging station to be depleted below an aggregate flow of 5 maf for any period of 10 <br />consecutive years, The average annual historical flow at the Maybell gage is 1.135 maf and <br />the minimum historical 10 year sum is 9.1 maf. Hence, Colorado has not even closely <br />approached its depletion entitlement under the Compact. <br /> <br />Although the Yampa River basin is relatively undeveloped in terms of potential water <br />use, it is considered over-appropriated from a Colorado water rights perspective, The sum of <br />decreed (absolute and conditional) direct flow and storage water rights is greater than the <br />average annual flow of the river as measured at the Maybell gage. Many of these rights are <br />conditional and have not yet been exercised; others have not routinely been exercised to their <br />full decreed amounts due to the relatively low demand for water in the basin, As a result, the <br />mainstem water rights of the Yampa River have not historically required administration by the <br />Colorado State Engineer. <br /> <br />It is commonly believed that the controlling water rights on the river are the conditional <br />water rights for the Juniper Project. Any discussion of relative water rights priorities in the <br />basin generally comes down to whether the rights in question are senior or junior to the <br />Juniper rights, In recognition of this fact, River District has obtained decree amendments and <br />agreements with water users in the basin subordinating the priority of the Juniper rights to <br />their junior water rights and uses, One of these agreements (the "general subordination") <br />stipulates that the Juniper rights will not place a call for water rights administration until <br />upstream consumption under junior water rights exceeds 65,000 af. The other subordination <br />agreements address specific junior water rights and uses, <br /> <br />One of the principal purposes of the current study is to assess the implications, <br />particularly with regard to future basin water needs, of transferring a portion of the Juniper <br />Project water rights to instream flow use to assist in the recovery of the endangered fishes. <br />There are two broad institutional strategies by which this transfer might occur, each of which <br />raises its own set of technical and institutional issues, <br /> <br />One strategy would be to transfer the entire amount of the Juniper water right to an <br />instream flow right with protection of existing junior uses and future basin water development <br />needs occurring solely through subordination of the instream flow right to those uses and <br /> <br />S-3 <br />
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