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Breakthrough Colorado River plan: The benefits and limits

After nearly a year of gridlocked negotiations on the future of the stressed Colorado River, Arizona, California, and Nevada reached a breakthrough last week, uniting behind a voluntary proposal to further curtail their water use.

Some observers call the plan “historic.” But how significant is it? Since the news broke, others have described the Lower Basin agreement as overhyped. It’s still just a proposal, and only a short-term one for managing critically low reservoirs, which threaten hydropower and water supplies for millions of people.

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With the Colorado River in near crisis, and talks on water use gridlocked, Arizona, California, and Nevada recently agreed to cut use. Their proposal shows progress, but has limits.

While some see the proposal as “the best thing since sliced bread,” others see it as a Band-Aid on a bullet wound,” says Nevada negotiator John Entsminger. “Neither of those things is true,” says the general manager of the Southern Nevada Water Authority.

A more “balanced” approach, he explains, would be to say: “It’s a really good thing that the states reached an agreement, so that they have the space in the next 3 1/2 years to work on these longer-term, more durable issues.”

After nearly a year of gridlocked negotiations on the future of the stressed Colorado River, Arizona, California, and Nevada reached a breakthrough last week, uniting behind a voluntary proposal to further curtail their water use.

Some observers call the proposal “historic.” But how significant is it? Since the news broke, others have described the Lower Basin agreement as overhyped. It’s still just a proposal, and only a short-term one for managing critically low reservoirs, which threaten hydropower and water supplies for millions of people.

While some see the proposal as “the best thing since sliced bread,” others see it as a Band-Aid on a bullet wound,” says Nevada negotiator John Entsminger. “Neither of those things is true,” says the general manager of the Southern Nevada Water Authority.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

With the Colorado River in near crisis, and talks on water use gridlocked, Arizona, California, and Nevada recently agreed to cut use. Their proposal shows progress, but has limits.

A more “balanced” approach, he explains, would be to say: “It’s a really good thing that the states reached an agreement, so that they have the space in the next 3 1/2 years to work on these longer-term, more durable issues.”

Below, the Monitor looks at the benefits and limits of the agreement among the Lower Basin states.

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