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<br /> Reservoir Operating Studies <br /> 7,000 of greater than the current potential conditions. The 2040-level demands are <br /> approximately 38,000 of greater than current potential conditions; they include additional <br /> generating units at the Craig and Hayden stations and a depletion of 8,000 of/yr associated with <br /> operation of a coal-gasification plant in the Craig area. Given these data and assumptions, total <br /> annual basin depletions modeled under the 2015 and 2040 demand conditions are roughly <br /> 128,000 of and 159,000 af, respectively. <br /> Water Rights <br /> r <br /> The water rights of the various demands are represented in the model only in te <br />ms of <br /> their priorities relative to each other and relative to the Juniper Project right. Generally <br /> speaking, existing uses are considered senior to the Juniper rights while future uses, both 2015 <br /> and 2040 level, are considered junior to the Juniper rights. There are two exceptions to this <br /> general rule: 1) certain existing agricultural uses are modeled as having rights junior to the <br /> Juniper project, and 2) the Hayden generating station has sufficient rights senior to the Juniper <br /> Project to serve its projected long-term demand. <br /> The model simulates the water rights and operations of three reservoirs, Stagecoach, <br /> Steamboat Lake, and Elkhead. At each reservoir the model simulates the administrative <br /> practices of the State Engineer. Storage water carried over on each reservoir's administration <br /> (or "start-fill") date is charged against the next year's decreed fill amount. The carryover <br /> water is charged against the senior-most decree first, then against the junior decrees. Although <br /> specific reservoir accounts are maintained throughout the water year, water carried over is re- <br /> allocated on the administration date among the various accounts according to specific account <br />priorities. Reservoir administration dates were modeled as the first day of the month following <br /> the month having the lowest average simulated end-of-month storage. In all three cases the <br /> reservoirs were modeled with an administration date of April 1st. <br /> Three storage decrees were represented at Stagecoach Reservoir--the Stagecoach <br /> Reservoir decree for 22,106 of per year, the Bear Reservoir decree for 11,614 of per year, and <br /> the Four Counties decree which has an average annual limit of 4,595 af. The amount of the <br /> Four Counties decree varies from year to year depending on the natural yields of the rights at <br /> their original points of diversion on Fish and Walton Creeks in the upper Yampa River basin; <br /> for purposes of the basin model, this variable amount was determined by following a method <br /> described in a report prepared by W.W. Wheeler, Inc. (1988). <br /> Two storage decrees are represented at Steamboat Lake, the original decree for 23,064 <br /> of and a new decree for 3,300 of applied for in 1990 by the Colorado Division of Wildlife <br /> (CDOW). The new decree permits the CDOW to legally store water above the present <br /> spillway crest at the lake and release it for fishery and other purposes; the supply so generated <br /> in the last few years has been leased under temporary contracts to the USFWS for mainstem <br /> flow enhancement. <br />Three storage decrees were represented at Elkhead Reservoir in model scenarios <br />representing the enlargement of the reservoir--the decrees for 8,310 of and 5,000 of associated <br />with the existing reservoir and an additional decree reflecting the contemplated transfer of the <br />River District's California Park Reservoir conditional water right to the enlarged reservoir. <br />The California Park decrees include a first fill decree for 36,536 of having a 1972 priority and <br />2-5