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Last modified
1/26/2010 12:30:38 PM
Creation date
10/11/2006 10:20:39 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Water Supply Protection
File Number
8220.101.19
Description
Glen Canyon Dam/Lake Powell
State
AZ
Basin
Colorado Mainstem
Date
12/3/1996
Author
USDOI
Title
Upper Colorado Region Responses to Questions From Paul Bledsoe
Water Supply Pro - Doc Type
Report/Study
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<br />2 maf would be dead storage, The 4 maf of active storage capacity would be required to <br />maintain minimum power head and would only be useable to meet downstream demands if <br />the power system were shut down, <br /> <br />* <br /> <br />Only present levels of use of Colorado River waters could be maintained without <br />significant and extreme risk to both water supply and power supplies, About 1.7 mafof <br />iil.uirl: use of Colorado River water would have to be forgone in the Upper Basin, <br /> <br />* <br /> <br />Power generation at Glen Canyon Dam would be reduced by a significant amount, <br />possibly about 30%, Power generation at Hoover Dam would increase some lesser <br />amount, with the net system energy production showing a reduction, <br /> <br />* <br /> <br />Twenty miles of stream channel would be recovered in each of the Colorado mainstem and <br />San Juan River drainages, Approximately 15 miles of the Escalante River would be <br />recovered, Some of this benefit would be lost in years of above average runoff as the <br />runoff is temporarily stored at Lake Powell due to insufficient release capacities (45,000 <br />cfs), As much as 70 feet of vacated reservoir space would be required to pass the runoff <br />experienced in 1983 or 1984 (resulting peak reservoir elevation would be 3570 feet), <br /> <br />* <br /> <br />Evaporation at Lake Powell would be reduced by about 65% (about 320,000 af), but <br />evaporation would increase by 9% (70,000 at) at Lake Mead, leaving a net decrease in <br />evaporation of 20% (250,000 at) of the total system evaporation, <br /> <br />3 <br />
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