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I ?F7 <br />National Water Summary 1987-Water Supply and Use: INSTREAM WATER USE 109 <br />U <br />INSTREAM WATER USE IN THE UNITED STATES-WATER LAWS AND <br />METHODS FOR DETERMINING FLOW REQUIREMENTS <br />By Berton L. Lamb' and Harvey R. Doerksen2 <br />INTRODUCTION <br />Water use generally is divided into two primary <br />classes-offstream use and instream use. In offstream <br />use, sometimes called out-of-stream or diversionary <br />use, water is withdrawn (diverted) from a stream or <br />aquifer and transported to the place of use. Examples <br />are irrigated agriculture, municipal water supply, and <br />industrial use. Each of these offstream uses, which <br />decreases the volume of water available downstream <br />from the point of diversion, is discussed in previous <br />articles in this volume. Instrea n use, which generally <br />does not diminish the flow downstream from its point <br />of use, and its importance are described in this article. <br />One of the earliest instream uses of water in <br />the United States was to turn the water wheels that <br />powered much of the Nation's industry in the 18th and <br />19th centuries. Although a small volume of water <br />might have been diverted to a mill near streamside, <br />that water usually was returned to the stream near the <br />point of diversion and, thus, the flow was not <br />diminished downstream from the mill. Over time, the <br />generation of hydroelectric power replaced mill wheels <br />as a means of converting water flow into energy. Since <br />the 1920's, the generation of hydroelectric power <br />increasingly has become a major instream use of <br />water. By 1985, more than 3 billion acre-feet of water <br />(3,050,000 million gallons per day) was used annually <br />for hydropower generation (Solley and others, 1988, <br />p. 45)-enough water to cover the State of Colorado <br />to a depth of 51 feet. <br />Navigation is another instream use with a long <br />history. The Lewis and Clark expedition journals and <br />many of Mark Twain's novels illustrate the extent to <br />which the Nation originally depended on adequate <br />streamflows for basic transportation. Navigation in the <br />1980's is still considered to be an instream use; <br />however, it often is based upon a stream system that <br />has been modified greatly through channelization, <br />diking, and construction of dams and locks. The <br />present (1987) inland water navigation system in the <br />conterminous United States consists of about <br />12,000 miles of maintained waterways, over which <br />about 500 million tons of cargo is carried each year <br />(U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, 1988, p. 16). <br />Although not so widely practiced in recent <br />years, streams have been used to dispose of raw waste <br />products from homes, communities, and factories. <br />This use has been discouraged by law and public policy <br />because of public health concerns and the damage it <br />causes to the environment. <br />Beginning in the mid-1960's, other instream <br />uses gained new prominence in the water-resources <br />arena-the assertion of a legal right to a free-flowing <br />stream for biological, recreational, and esthetic <br />purposes. These uses themselves, however, are not <br />new. Riverine habitat always has produced fish, and <br />the beauty of flowing water always has evoked a strong <br />sense of esthetic appreciation. What is new is the <br />emerging legitimacy and awareness of these non- <br />economic uses under State and Federal laws and <br />regulations. In the past, environmental uses of flow- <br />ing water were ignored, for the most part, under a <br />long-standing legal tradition that favored offstream <br />uses and certain instream uses that had a strong <br />economic basis. <br />The history of the instream-flow policy debate <br />really concerns these recently recognized types of <br />instream uses. Although the more traditional water <br />uses have been protected by law, the recognition of <br />other instream uses has resulted in substantial changes <br />in State water laws. Although methods for determin- <br />ing the volume of water needed for most traditional <br />water uses are relatively straight-forward and well- <br />established, methods for determining water require- <br />ments for the instream uses have been developed only <br />recently and are continuing to evolve. <br />Water laws that have favored the more <br />traditional water uses, the inherent nature of conflict <br />between instream and offstream water uses, and the <br />special kinds of technological and philosophical <br />problems posed by the "newer" types of instream uses <br />are described below. Water laws that have been passed <br />to accommodate the more recently recognized instream <br />uses are summarized. <br />WATER-LAW CHANGES-THE WEST <br />Water is a finite but renewable resource. In <br />times and places of plentiful supply or small demand, <br />major conflict over the available supply is not <br />common. In the Western States, however, because of <br />the chronic scarcity of water, it is not surprising that <br />"water wars" are common. It also is not surprising <br />that the water laws in this and region evolved to pro- <br />tect those who "got there first." <br />In the and West, two early and major water uses <br />were hydraulic mining and irrigated agriculture. These <br />uses, which often required water to be transported for <br />long distances from the stream to the point of use, also <br />often consumed a large part of the diverted water <br />(Gould, 1977, p. 4-5). To recognize this offstream <br />nature of water use and to protect the earliest users, <br />a body of water law, known as the appropriation <br />doctrine, evolved. This law has two primary <br />principles-first in time is first in right, and benefi- <br />cial use of water is the basis of the right. First in time <br />means that the earliest water-right holder has a right <br />to all the water needed to fulfill the right, and then <br />the second, the third, and so forth, can claim their <br />rights. Each water right depends upon supplies avail- <br />able after all prior rights have been satisfied (Gould, <br />1977, p. 5). Thus, as the supply decreases, lower <br />priority water right holders must stop using water until <br />the more senior users can be satisfied. <br />RECEIVED <br />AU G 2 01990 <br />"I <br />'U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 2U.S. Department of the Interior, Office of Program Analysis.