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Last modified
7/29/2009 1:47:39 PM
Creation date
4/10/2008 5:00:19 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Water Supply Protection
File Number
8200.700
Description
Colorado River General
State
CO
Author
Silmon Smith
Title
Analysis of Colorado's Share of Colorado River Water and It's Use, Consumptve, Present and Potential
Water Supply Pro - Doc Type
Report/Study
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<br />. <br /> <br />" <br /> <br />It will be remembered that the experimental plant is located on the U. S. <br />Naval Shale Fuel Reserve, (any failure to properly report Mr. Guthrie is <br />the fault of the compi,ler and not Mr. Guthrie). Mr. Guthrie made no <br />effort to estimate the required consumption of water by incidental <br />activities which would normally accompany such a development and the <br />figure of 32,000 acre feet has been added to his estimated minimum peace <br />time operation to cover that factor, making an even 300,000 acre feet <br />estimate. <br /> <br />Note l6. There will be of necessity reservoirs serving the presently authorized <br />. diversion projects and also reservoirs in Western Colorado for use of <br />Irrigation and industry in addition to the main stem impounding reservoirs <br />and from all of these there will be evaporation depending in amount upon <br />their location. It is impossible to definitely arrive at this amount and <br />this figure has been arbitrarily adopted as a minimum. <br /> <br />Note 17. There remains in the Colorado River for consumptive use by Colorado <br />389,340 acre feet of water. Referring back to items 10, 1l and 12 where <br />no sufficient study has been made, it is reasonnble to assume that they <br />are 39% too small and,if it shall later be determined that such is a <br />fact, as has already been determined on the Gunnison and Colorado (above <br />Grand Junction), then there will be required to complete the irrigation <br />program in Western Colorado 216,278 acre feet of water which must be sub- <br />tracted fram the 389,340 acre feet, leaving 173,062 acre feet tor all <br />other purposes, and unless the flow of the Colorado River gets up to the <br />long term average, this will be further reduced by an additional Mexican <br />Treaty burden. Whatever amount may remain, whether it be 389,340 or <br />173,062 acre feet must cover all industrial uses, including metal mining, <br />recovery of atomic energy strategic materials, hydrogenation of COal, and <br />an increase in the oil shale recovery program which might ensue in the <br />event of war. The exact requirements for these purposes are of course, <br />at this time not possible of exact determination. <br /> <br />It is apparent from the Swmnary Report to the United States Bureau <br />of Mines by the Corps of Engineers, United States Army, submitted in May <br />1949, that the recovery of synthetic' fuel values in Western Colorado from <br />shale and coal will be measured by the water available for treatment arid <br />not by the amount of shale and coal which will not be exhausted in several <br />hundred years. <br /> <br />On Page 10 of the Bureau's 1946 Report on the Colorado River, House <br />Document 419, appears the following: "Enormous beds of bituminous and <br />subbituminous coal within the basin (of Colorado River) in Eastern Utah, <br />Southern Wyoming and Western Colorado are estimated to contain nearly one- <br />fourth of all the coal reserves -in the United States. Mines in these <br />areas now supply most of the coal requirements in the Rocky Mountain and <br />Pacific Coast areas". <br /> <br />On Page 71 of the same House Document 419 prepared by the Bureau of <br />Reclamation in 1946 appears the following language: "The Colorado River <br />Basin is a part of America's frontier. It is" perhaps, as little de- <br />veloped as any comparable area in the United States. Yet it is known <br />that here lie buried one-sixth of the entire world's coal reserves, bil- <br />lions of barrels of oil in shale and sand (equivalent to many times the <br /> <br />-4- <br /> <br />ii",-/-~ <br />
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