The transition from coal power to natural gas and renewables in the West is picking up steam. That shift has important implications for carbon mitigation, but it also has produced an often overlooked yet suddenly significant development: the release of water previously needed for cooling coal-fired power plants for other uses.
Access to water, in large part supervised by the federal government’s Bureau of Land Management, is perhaps the major issue in the arid West. Unlike in the water-abundant East, where property owners are free to draw at will from streams, rivers, and lakes, in the West, water is allocated under a prior appropriation doctrine, which assigns water rights to people located upstream, provided it is taken for “beneficial use.” Conflict is inevitable without well-functioning markets for water rights.
As coal plants across the West, from Arizona to Oregon and Washington, continue to close as a result of competition from cheap natural gas and subsidies for solar and wind power, small towns like Craig, Colorado, located on the western slope of the Rockies with nearly 9,000 residents, hundreds of whom work in the coal industry, will have the option of buying the coal plant’s water rights when it is mothballed in 2030. Craig’s local economy can be transformed by the
availability of new water supplies. The same possibility is opening in
many other cities and towns throughout the West. The transformation is
underway at a time when water conservation is an unusually high priority
because years of drought have left rivers, lakes, and reservoirs
alarmingly low. Cooling a coal plant uses huge amounts of water. The one
in Craig consumes an average 16,000 acre-feet of water every year, sucking up water that could supply as many as 32,000 households. The
bad news from coal’s demise is that thousands more coal industry
workers nationwide will lose their jobs. (Industry employment is down by
roughly 100,000 since the late 1980s).
The good news is that once the last western coal plant is closed, more
water will be available for residential and recreational use as well as
for ranching and farming...MORE
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
Wednesday, July 01, 2020
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