Lake Mead is drying up: Water levels are falling in America’s largest reservoir; If it dries up, so could power and water for much of the Southwest
Posted by: Maven on May 8, 2009 at 7:19 amImagine Nevada’s Lake Mead, the largest reservoir in the United States, as a great sand pit, and imagine the population of the western United States as a colossal ostrich burying its head in the pit. And now, imagine the sand level dropping so fast that the willfully ignorant bird is forced to confront the fact that Lake Mead may actually become as dry as a sand pit in a decade.
Lake Mead stores water from the Colorado River. When full, it holds 9.3 trillion gallons, an amount equal to the water that flows through the Colorado River in two years. The water from Lake Mead is used for many things. It irrigates a million acres of crops in the United States and Mexico, and supplies water to tens of millions of people. Its mighty Hoover Dam generates enough electricity to power a half-million homes. Additionally, the power from Hoover Dam is used to carry water up and across the Sierra Nevada Mountains on its way to Southern California.
In 2000, the water level at Lake Mead was 1,214 feet, close to its all-time high. It’s been dropping ever since. When Lake Mead was built during the 1920s and 1930s, the western United States was enjoying one of the wettest periods of the past 1,200 years. Even today, our so-called drought is still wetter than the average precipitation for the area averaged over centuries. In other words, for the last 75 years, we’ve been partying like it’s 1929. Farmers grow rice by flooding arid farmland with water from Lake Mead; residents of desert communities maintain front lawns of green grass; golfers demand courses in areas where the temperature exceeds 100 degrees Fahrenheit during the summer.
Read more from GOOD Magazine by clicking here.
Somewhat related: Here’s a graphic depiction of where major cities get their water from. It’s a bit confusing, and not helped by the fact that the graphic is so wide that I can’t see it all on the screen at once. Los Angeles is on the graphic: that would be Los Angeles, the city, I assume from the data they used. The 53% from Lake Havasu must represent the amount of water DWP buys from MWD, which could come from the Colorado River system, or from the Delta, or from other sources.
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