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As officials from the Colorado River Basin States (AZ, CA, CO, NM, NV, UT and WY) and the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (USBR) struggle to reach consensus on how to manage the declining river after 2026 when current agreements expire, some things remain clear.
First, Colorado River water usage exceeds supply, evident in the continued decline of the Colorado River鈥檚 reservoirs that were full 25 years ago. Today, they sit two-thirds empty.
Second, solutions are urgently needed. Nearly 40 million people depend on the Colorado River water supply, and 400 bird species depend on the Colorado River鈥檚 habitats. Water needs across the basin must be met without harming the last remaining Colorado River-dependent habitats, including the Ci茅nega de Santa Clara in Sonora, Mexico.
Unfortunately, some water users are reviving interest in restarting the Yuma Desalting Plant, an antiquated U.S. facility in southwestern Arizona that, if operated, would negatively impact essential bird habitat.
Earlier this month, the board of the Central Arizona Water Conservation District (the agency that manages the Central Arizona Project, the 336-mile long canal that delivers Colorado River water to central and southern Arizona) proposed a measure to support operation of the Yuma Desalting Plant, specifically calling on the federal government to prioritize reducing 鈥渢he impact of the bypass flows on the Colorado River system.鈥 This obscure mention of 鈥渂ypass flows鈥 is a direct reference to the water that supplies the Ci茅nega de Santa Clara, the largest remaining wetland in the long-desiccated Colorado River Delta. Extracting water from this ecosystem could have devastating impacts on the natural heritage and wildlife of the Colorado River Basin and could extend to the migrating birds of the Pacific Flyway.
As 探花精选 implements Flight Plan鈥攐ur strategy to conserve 300 million acres of quality, connected, and climate-resilient habitat鈥攑rotecting and restoring bird habitats while improving the health and reliability of our water supplies for communities is a priority for our Colorado River program.
Origins of the Ci茅nega de Santa Clara
The Ci茅nega provides crucial habitat, food, and shelter for hundreds of thousands of birds who migrate north and south along the Pacific Flyway, including the Western Sandpiper, American Avocet, and Snowy Plover. It also supports the world鈥檚 largest remaining population of the endangered Yuma Ridgway鈥檚 Rail, a reclusive bird living in the marshes.
In 1972, in the wake of adopting water quality standards for Colorado River water deliveries to Mexico, the United States worked with Mexico to build a canal (called the Main Outlet Drain Extension, or 鈥淢ODE鈥) to divert salty agricultural drainage water from the Wellton-Mohawk Irrigation and Drainage District in southern Arizona away from the Colorado River. This canal diverted the water supplies away from the river because farms downriver in Mexico鈥檚 Mexicali Valley had been experiencing damage to their salt-sensitive crops. The salty water in the MODE canal is known as the 鈥渂ypass flow鈥 because it bypasses the Colorado River.