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BOARD00667
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Last modified
8/16/2009 2:53:03 PM
Creation date
10/4/2006 6:42:26 AM
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Board Meetings
Board Meeting Date
3/16/2004
Description
WSP Section - Statewide Water Supply Initiative (SWSI) Status Update
Board Meetings - Doc Type
Memo
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<br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. Thursday, January 29, 2004 <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br /> <br />NEWS 4 <br /> <br />Study: State Water Needs Could Require Reusing Water, New Dams <br />http://news4colorado.comllocalnews/localstory029113013.html <br /> <br />Jan 29, 2004 9:29 am USIMountain <br />DENVER (AP) Colorado will need enough additional water to supply the equivalent of a <br />new city about the size of the Denver metropolitan area by 2030, according to a new <br />study. <br /> <br />The $2.7 million study, funded by the Colorado Water Conservation Board, concluded <br />that the South Platte River basin, which supplies Denver and much of northeast <br /> <br />Colorado, will need 60 percent more water if current growth projections are accurate. <br /> <br />The study, issued Wednesday, urged residents to reuse water, build dams and <br />conserve more. <br /> <br />Water experts in each of Colorado's eight river basins say coping with the shortfall could <br />require more conservation, cooperation among wat~r interests, reuse of existing water, <br />transferring water rights, improving or enlarging existing dams, pipelines and reservoirs, <br />or building new ones. <br /> <br />"This study will provide a solid foundation for local interests, state policy-makers and <br />water providers to determine the best ways to meet current and future demands for <br />water, and to be better prepared to deal with droughts such as the current extreme, <br />multiyear drought our state continues to face," said Eric Wilkinson, chairman of the <br />conservation board. <br /> <br />More than 80 public meetings in the eight river basins over 18 months were held to <br />develop the assessment, which also included input from surveys with 170 Colorado <br />water providers. <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />, <br />
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