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<br />26 Chapter 4-'-Present and Future Davefopment <br /> <br />N; <br />~ <br />~...., <br />......' <br />.J;:a. <br /> <br />on September 30, 1968, A Definite Plan Report <br />was completed in April 1977 with modifications <br />to the original plan to meet Native American <br />requirements, Ultimate total project depletions <br />are estimated to be 80,900 acre-feet annually, <br />Average annual consumptive use will be <br />70,250 acre-feet for irrigation, 4,350 acre-feet for <br />M&I use, and 6,300 acre-feet for evaporation, <br /> <br />Reclamation estimates that reservoir <br />evaporation and the bulk of the irrigation uses <br />will be depleting the Colorado River system by <br />37,000 acre-feet in 1990, and 50,000 acre-feet by <br />2000, By 2010 the project will be fully <br />operational at the depletion level of <br />80,900 acre-feet, <br /> <br />Fruitland Mesa Project <br /> <br />The project was authorized as a participating <br />project of the Colorado River Storage Project by <br />Public Law 88-568 on September 2, 1964, The <br />authorization was based on a Feasibility Report <br />prepared in 1963, A Definite Plan Report was <br />prepared in June 1967, and a repayment <br />contract executed in June 1969, Minor <br />construction work was completed on the existing <br />Gould Canal in 1973, but no other construction <br />has been accomplished, The project plan was <br />substantially modified as described in the <br />revised August 1977, Definite Plan Report, with <br />estimated depletions of 21,300 acre-feet, The <br />President's Water Project Review in 1977 <br />deleted funding for the project, and no further <br />construction funding has been provided, <br />However, the project has not been deauthorized, <br />and is, therefore, considered on a deferred status <br />until funding is provided, For planning <br />purposes, project depletions have been deferred <br />until after 2040, <br /> <br />Savery-Pot Hook Project <br /> <br />The project was authorized as a participating <br />project of the Colorado River Storage Project by <br />Public Law 88-568 on September 2, 1964, The <br />authorization was based upon a Feasibility <br />Report prepared in 1962, A Definite Plan <br />Report was prepared in June 1971, revised in <br />January 1972, and updated by an Advance <br />Defmite Plan Report dated May 1977, Stream <br /> <br />depletions in the 1977 report are estimated at <br />11,900 acre-feet in Colorado and 10,500 acre-feet <br />in Wyoming, The President's Water Project <br />Review in 1977 deleted funding for the project, <br />and no further construction funding has been <br />provided, The project was not deauthorized and <br />is, therefore, considered to be on a deferred <br />status until funding is provided, For planning <br />purposes, project depletions have been deferred <br />until after 2040, <br /> <br /> <br />San Miguel Project <br /> <br />A Feasibility Report was prepared in 1966, and <br />the project was authorized as a participating <br />project of the Colorado River Storage Project by <br />the Colorado River Basin Project Act (Public <br />Law 90-537) on September 30, 1968, Advance <br />planning studies have continued and various <br />plans have been considered, but none are <br />feasible based upon current policies and <br />procedures for planning water and related land <br />resources projects, A wide array of development <br />plans has been investigated, including a mix of <br />agricultural, municipal, and industrial uses, <br />Reclamation prepared a planning report <br />summarizing available data and options, This <br />report included estimates for a large acreage <br />alternative, a small acreage alternative, and a <br />conservation alternative, The small acreage <br />alternative with estimated depletions of <br />12,000 acre-feet for irrigation, 12,000 acre-feet <br />for industrial use, and 1,000 acre-feet for <br />municipal use is assumed to be a reasonable <br />level of development, For planning purposes, <br />project depletions have been deferred until 2040, <br /> <br />Upper Gunnison River Basin Projects <br /> <br />Water rights were granted by the State of <br />Colorado to the Colorado River Water <br />Conservation District for the Wayne N, Aspinall <br />Unit (formerly Curecanti Unit) ofthe Colorado <br />River Storage Project with a priority date of <br />November 13, 1957, These rights were assigned <br />by the District to the United States in January <br />1962 subject to the condition that the unit would <br />be developed and operated in a manner <br />consistent with beneficial use of the waters in <br />the Gunnison River Basin, In order that future <br />developments in the Upper Gunnison Basin <br />