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Last modified
1/26/2010 4:34:40 PM
Creation date
4/3/2008 10:03:38 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Water Supply Protection
File Number
8282.600.10.B
Description
2004 Annual Operating Plan
Basin
Colorado Mainstem
Author
USDOI/BOR
Title
2004 Annual Operating Plan for Colorado River Systems
Water Supply Pro - Doc Type
Operating Principles/Plan
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<br />January 7, 2004 <br /> <br />5 <br /> <br />2003 OPERATIONS SUMMARY AND RESERVOIR STATUS <br /> <br />Drier than average hydrologic conditions were observed in the Colorado River basin in water year <br />2003, marking the fourth consecutive year of drought in the basin. Basinwide precipitation was 89 <br />percent of average during water year 2003 with snowpack accumulations also being below normal <br />levels. As the spring snowmelt season began on April I, 2003, snowpack levels throughout the <br />Colorado River Basin averaged about 80 percent of average. The volume of run of fin the basin was <br />reduced, however, due to very dry antecedent soil moisture conditions resulting from three previous <br />years of drought. Unregulated! I) inflow into Lake Powell during the April through July runoff <br />period in 2003 was 3.92 maf(4,840 mcm) or 49 percent of the 30 yearaverage(2). Total unregulated <br />inflow into Lake Powell for water year 2003 was 6.36 maf (7,845 mcm) or 53 percent of average. <br /> <br />Water year 2003 marked the fourth consecutive year with below average inflow into Colorado River <br />reservoirs. Unregulated inflow to Lake Powell was 62, 59, and 25 percent of average in water years <br />2000,2001, and 2002, respectively. Reservoir storage at Lake Powell and Lake Mead declined for <br />the fourth straight year. By the end of water year 2003, Lake Mead storage decreased by 1.48 maf <br />(1,830 mcm). Storage in Lake Powell decreased by 2.36 maf(2910 mcm). Storage in reservoirs <br />upstream of Lake Powell increased by approximately 0.055 maf (68 mcm) in 2003. At the <br />beginning of water year 2003, Colorado River total system storage was 64 percent of capacity. Total <br />Colorado River system storage decreased by approximately 3.8 maf(4,690 mcm) during water year <br />2003. As of September 30,2003, total system storage was 57 percent of capacity. <br /> <br />Even though Colorado River reservoir storage has been reduced during 2003, deliveries of water to <br />meet obligations pursuant to applicable provisions of AT he Law of the River@ were maintained. <br /> <br />Preliminary Colorado River water delivery accounting data for calendar year (CY) 2002, compiled <br />pursuant to Article V of the Decree, indicated that requests for water deliveries by agricultural users <br />in California during CY 2002 had the potential to exceed the maximum amount of water available <br />under the determinations made in the 2002 AOP approved and transmitted on January 14,2002. In <br />light of the potential for such overuse within the Lower Basin, and after consultation with members <br />of the CRMWG, a supplement to the 2002 AOP was approved on November 22, 2002. The <br />supplement to the 2002 AOP addressed this potential CY 2002 overuse and established appropriate <br /> <br />(I) Unregulated inflow adjusts for the etTects of operations at upstream reservoirs. It is computed <br />by adding the change in storage, and the evaporation losses from upstream reservoirs to the <br />observed inflow. Unregulated inflow is used because it provides an inflow time series that is not <br />biased by upstream reservoir operations. <br />(2) Inflow statistics throughout this document will be as compared to 30-year averages. <br />
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