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Section 5 <br />Legal and Engineering Considerations <br />South Platte Task Force on July 12, 2007. These two documents present greater detail <br />on the issue of salvaged and saved water. <br />Conserved Consumptive Use Water <br />Saved and salvaged water, as currently construed in Colorado, do not include the <br />concept of water potentially conserved through the reduction of crop consumptive <br />use. The transfer of this water, while theoretically possible under Colorado water law, <br />has not yet been tested in water court or codified by the legislature. Conserved CU <br />Water, as described in this paper, describes water that is part of the consumptive use <br />of a water right that is permanently removed from an irrigated cropping system (or <br />other benef icial use) . <br />Implications <br />What are the legal implications f or agricultural users that want to implement on-farm <br />water conservation measures? Colorado Water Law permits the use of conservation <br />measures. Depending on how these measures are implemented, they could result in <br />increased consumptive use, reduced return flows and/or increased irrigated acreage <br />(if those acres were part of the original water rights decree) and therefore reduce <br />return flows, potentially impacting other water rights or compacts. These issues place <br />added responsibility on the State Engineer to ensure that other water rights are not <br />injured and the basin is incompliance with interstate compacts. Conversely, the <br />irrigator can accomplish his historical consumptive use with less total stream <br />diversions via implementation of conservation measures. The only water that is <br />transferable is the historical consumptive use and as described previously, this often <br />entails a lengthy and costly process through the Water Courts. <br />DRAFT 5-6 <br />