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<br />IJ U lib IJ <br /> <br />J <br />. <br />J <br />J <br />J <br />~ <br />~ <br />J <br />~ <br />~ <br />1 <br />] <br />1 <br />1 <br />1 <br />1 <br />. <br />1 <br />I <br /> <br />Sectio!/ 5 - Colorado Hiller l!.I{' Tr{'!/(/.I <br /> <br />Requirements for additional <br />supplies could occur as <br />early as 2015, and by the <br />year 2100 the minimum <br />additional supply required <br />for statewide M&I use is <br />estimated to be about <br />550,000 acre-feet, <br /> <br />when considered on a regional basis, However, demands for in- <br />dividual providers can differ considerably from the regional av- <br />erage due to local growth trends and individual water require- <br />ments, <br /> <br />M & I demands in the Front Range metropolitan area were esti- <br />mated in the Metropolitan Supply Environmental Impact State- <br />ment. This study projected a Front Range population of 3,830,000 <br />in 2020, and a water demand of 703,000 acre-feet by 2035. This <br />compares to the existing M & I demand in all of Water Division <br />I of about 640,000 acre-feet <br /> <br />Requirements for Additional Supplies <br /> <br />Projection of additional statewide water requirements involves <br />interpretation and extension of several types of information gath- <br />ered in the current study, Municipal, industrial and irrigation <br />water uses are the major water use activities which may incur <br />shortages in the future. Due to lack of information on the avail- <br />ability and timing of surface and groundwater for irrigation, it is <br />difficult to estimate the magnitude of irrigation water use as com- <br />pared to supplies in the future. If projections showing a decrease <br />in agricultural water usage are correct, available supplies should <br />be adequate to meet future irrigation demands as long as existing <br />irrigation water supplies and water rights are protected, For pur- <br />poses of the remainder of this report, it will be asswned that there <br />will be no additional demand for agricultural water, and that all <br />increased statewide water demand occurs in the M & I sector. <br /> <br />The need for additional M & I water is estimated based on the <br />projected population, water demands, and the 1996 Colorado <br />Water Needs Survey results. Figures 15 to 20 illustrate the pro- <br />jected demands based on population projections and based on <br />survey results, and estimated dry year yields as derived from the <br />survey data, Both statewide projections and individual Water <br />Division projection.s are presented in these figures. (With lim- <br />ited returned surveys from Divisions 3 and 6, reasonable projec- <br />tions can not be derived for these two Divisions,) As illustrated <br />in these figures, a range of dry year yield (low estimates and high <br />estimates) is presented, Low and high estimates are derived as- <br />suming agencies which did not provide information on their dry <br />year yield estimations can supply their service area's growth up <br />to year 2010 and 2100, respectively, with existing supplies. <br /> <br />5-9 <br /> <br />-- COLOraDo <br />"._ Farm Bureau <br />