Expect another dry year (2026) on New Mexico’s Rio Grande

I added the year to the title of this blog post for the search engines. Because what’s going on right now applies to a lot of years since I’ve been writing about this stuff at Inkstain.

I’m gathering string today for the first Water Matters podcast of 2026 (available on Buzzsprout and wherever fine podcasts are downloaded). One string I pulled: total 2025 flow at Otowi, the gateway to New Mexico’s Middle Rio Grande, was just 494,000 acre feet, the lowest since 1981 by my “danger John Fleck doing math” calculation.

Jan. 1 is early to be talking with any confidence about the coming year’s Rio Grande runoff, with another three-plus months of snow accumulation season ahead of us. And I walked to the market this morning to buy carrots in the midst of very light snow flurries! There’s snow on the Sandias! But I’ve got a podcast to help make, and yowza is the first-of-the-year runoff forecast from the NRCS lousy!

Median forecast for Otowi for the spring runoff: 48 percent of the 1991-2020 period of record. Best case (a one in ten chance on the wet side) is that we hit the average. Worst case I don’t even want to think about. San Marcial? Median forecast is just 17 percent of the 1991-2020 period of record. Worst case is so bad that the model breaks, spitting out a negative number.

Quoting John Prine

When I think back, it’s no wonder I’d become a songwriter. I saw everything as being connected. Movies, dreams, imagination . . . It was all one thing. It was all one circus tent. It took me a long time to find out it wasn’t that way with other people. They went to the circus—once. For an hour. How do you do that and leave it behind? Once you get to the circus you don’t leave.

–John Prine, from Tom Piazza’s Living in the Present with John Prine

Ribbons of Green, now available for pre-order

Book cover for "Ribbons of Green: The Rio Grande and the Making of Modern Albuquerque." Background: painting of mountains with a river flowing through a city.

Our new book, getting realer.

We need a tl;dr here, because I’ve got three or four different versions of this post on my hard drive half written, or in my head, half written.

Actual publication as a physical object you can hold in your hands is still five-plus months away, but our new book is now available for pre-order (click the “forthcoming” link here).

Here’s the racket: pre-orders help convince the algorithms of the book’s worth. Which helps the book reach the widest possible audience. Bob and I are confident of the book’s worth. I also recognize, as Roland Barthes might have argued, that it doesn’t matter what we intended, or what we think about the results. It’s in your hands now.

But the algorithms!

The map and the territory

An overly confusing map showing freeways, buildings, bus lines, bus stops, property lines, contour lines, in an unreadably confusing welter.

The map is not the territory, but is useful for identifying bus lines.

“What a useful thing a pocket-map is!” I remarked.

“That’s another thing we’ve learned from your Nation,” said Mein Herr, “map-making. But we’ve carried it much further than you. What do you consider the largest map that would be really useful?”

“About six inches to the mile.”

“Only six inches!” exclaimed Mein Herr. “We very soon got to six yards to the mile. Then we tried a hundred yards to the mile. And then came the grandest idea of all! We actually made a map of the country, on the scale of a mile to the mile!”

“Have you used it much?” I enquired.

“It has never been spread out, yet,” said Mein Herr: “the farmers objected: they said it would cover the whole country, and shut out the sunlight! So we now use the country itself, as its own map, and I assure you it does nearly as well.”

—Lewis Carroll, Sylvie and Bruno Concluded

When I was a teenage cross-country runner, I hung a topographic map on my bedroom wall—a nail through the house, a string marked in miles to measure my runs.

It was not about wayfinding. There was no place we hadn’t already wandered as kids; wandering has long been my practice. It was an effort to bring order, to measure and tally, to suss out the relationship between territory and map.

In Boy Scouts, we learned compasses and topo maps and I loved it—reading stories of up and down in the maps’ contour lines, then going into the mountains and living those lines, the hike an exercise in matching map with territory.

The topo maps were reliable representations of the territory, worthy of absolute trust as my teenage buddies and I climbed Mount Whitney and hiked the Pacific Crest Trail. Alfred Korzybski’s aphorism—“The map is not the territory”—was of no use. Yet here I am, in the twilight of my years, still puzzling over the epistemic relationship between the two.

The Quik-E-Mart on Christmas Day

Out riding Christmas morning, I ended up at the Maverik gas station and mini-mart nestled where Interstate 25 and Interstate 40 cross in the heart of Albuquerque. Zoom out on a map of the nation to what web cartographers call “zoom level 6,” and the only visible organization of space will be state borders, maybe rivers, but always interstate highways.

The tools available on my iPad are stunning in the variety of information they present: property boundaries and zoning; flood control channels and land ownership; bus lines and soil types; city council districts; historical points of interest and bike trails; aerial photos taken by Charles Lindbergh (they say) in 1935.

And yes, topographic contour lines.

But none show this: The truckers were working on Christmas, at least some of them; the woman behind the mini-mart counter was working; the unhoused who live in the area were working at staying alive. I watched a young couple walk off with a Christmas breakfast of microwaved pizza slices.

None of the mapping tools, in other words, show the totality of the territory. This is not meant to denigrate the mapping tools, and the knowledge they are able to convey, but to illustrate the epistemic challenge, the challenge of being mindful of what it is that we’re doing when we’re doing knowing.

It’s a neighborhood I’ve become fond of after discovering one of my favorite new “longcuts”—like shortcuts except instead of a shorter route from A to B on my bike, it’s a safer one. Piecing together sidewalks and parking lots and a dirt field, up past the cemetery, by a construction yard, beneath the freeway, around behind the piano repair shop, through the parking lot behind the bedraggled hotel, beneath another freeway, through the ever-present pile of sand covering the bike trail where I have to walk my bike—it provides a route across the automotive landscape we call “The Big I”, a tangle of freeway and frontage road and busy streets.

One of the important evaluative criteria for longcuts is their level of interesting. This route scores high.

There’s a municipal plan for the area with some nice maps. The maps don’t have my longcut, nor do they have the footpath into the Quik-E-Mart that the homeless couple used, heading home with their pizza slices. The planners did not anticipate anyone walking to the Quik-E-Mart. In my wanders, I watch for these little informal paths—territory encoding what James Scott calls “the vernacular,” standing in opposition to the plans of high modernist engineering and architectural planning, evidence that the map is ever not the territory.

Quoting John Entsminger

If you distill down what my six partners just said, I believe there’s three common things: Here’s all the great things my state has done. Here’s how hard/impossible it is to do any more. And here are all the reasons why other people should have to do more.

As long as we keep polishing those arguments and repeating them to each other, we are going nowhere.

John Entsminger, Southern Nevada Water Authority, speaking at the Colorado River Water Users Association

Quoting Huckleberry Finn

When you got to the table you couldn’t go right to eating, but you had to wait for the widow to tuck down her head and grumble a little over the victuals, though there warn’t really anything the matter with them,—that is, nothing only everything was cooked by itself. In a barrel of odds and ends it is different; things get mixed up, and the juice kind of swaps around, and the things go better.

– Huckleberry Finn/Mark Twain

I think about this every time I make a pot of chili.

Colorado River Deadlines & Incentives

A guest post by Friend of Inkstain Michael Cohen….

By Michael Cohen, Senior Fellow, Pacific Institute

December 15, 2025

Key Takeaways

  • The consensus-based effort to develop new rules to manage the Colorado River system hasn’t worked – it’s time for a new approach
  • Federal leadership and the credible threat of managing reservoirs to protect the system is that new approach

Missing Deadlines

Way back at the end of the last century, at the annual Colorado River conference in Vegas, Marc Reisner repeated the Margaret Thatcher quote that consensus is the absence of leadership. On Veterans Day, the seven Colorado River basin states missed yet another deadline to reach consensus on a conceptual plan for managing the shrinking Colorado River after the current rules expire in 2026. Valentine’s Day marks the next holiday deadline, this time for a detailed plan, but multiple missed deadlines give no indication that the states will reach consensus then, either.

The basin states can’t agree on the substance of a new agreement. They also disagree on the process to get there. While Arizona has called for the federal government to break the negotiation logjam, Colorado opposes federal intervention and continues to call for consensus. Each basin-state negotiator acts to protect their state’s interests, often at the expense of the short and long-term resilience of the Colorado River system as a whole and the 35 million people who rely on it. The continued failure to negotiate a plan challenges the efforts of irrigators, cities, businesses, and river runners throughout the basin to plan for 2027 and beyond.

Meanwhile, river runoff and reservoir storage get lower and lower and snowpack lags well below average. This is not a zero-sum game, with winners and losers. The more appropriate metaphor here is a shrinking pie, with smaller and smaller pieces.

Leadership

The basin state negotiators have met for years behind closed doors, without success. It’s time for a new approach. Aggressive federal intervention and the credible threat of a federally-imposed Colorado River management plan would offer political cover – or a political imperative – for the negotiators. The credible threat of a federal plan would give the negotiators the space to compromise without having to do so unilaterally and then being accused of not protecting their state’s interests.

But federal leadership alone is not enough – it must be coupled with a plausible federal plan that compels the states to act and can meet the magnitude of the ongoing crisis. As the Department of the Interior announced in its 6/15/2023 press release, the purpose of and need for the post-2026 guidelines is “to develop future operating guidelines and strategies to protect the stability and sustainability of the Colorado River.” To date, the development of the post-2026 guidelines has prioritized routine operations of Glen Canyon and Hoover dams over the system as a whole, a focus inconsistent with the magnitude and urgency of the problem. Prioritizing routine dam operations and hydropower generation over water delivery and environmental protection elevates the tool over the task. Seeking to preserve routine operations of the dams while imposing draconian cuts on water users is not a path to resilience and precludes alternatives that would help stabilize the system.

The Plan

Instead, by early next year, the Secretary should announce that Interior will implement a federal plan incorporating the following elements:

  1. Grant Tribal Nations the legal certainty and the ability to access, develop, or lease their water.
  2. Make accessible (“recover”) the roughly 5.6 million acre-feet (MAF) of water stored in Lake Powell below the minimum power pool elevation and avoid the additional ~0.25 MAF of annual evaporative losses from Powell by storing such water in Lake Mead and using Powell as auxiliary storage.
  3. As a condition precedent, the Lower Basin states agree not to place a “compact call” for the duration of the agreement.
  4. Implement annual Lower Basin water use reductions for the following calendar year based on total system contents on August 1:
    • 75% – 60%: cuts to Lower Basin water uses increasing from 0 to 1.5 MAF<60% – 38%: static cut to Lower Basin water uses of 1.5 MAF<38% – 23%: increasing cuts to Lower Basin water uses of up to 3.0 MAF total
    • below 23% of total system contents – cut Lower Basin water uses to the minimum required to protect human health and safety and satisfy present perfected rights
  5. If the Lower Basin states do not satisfy the condition precedent in #3 above, Reclamation limits Lower Basin deliveries to the minimum required to satisfy present perfected rights when total system contents are <75%.
  6. Recover water stored in federal Upper Basin reservoirs unless the Upper Basin states reduce annual water use based on total system contents:
    • <34% – 23%: Assuming the first 0.25 MAF “reduction” would be contributed by the elimination of Powell’s evaporative losses and gains from Glen Canyon bank storage, reduce Upper Basin water uses up to 0.65 MAF
    • below 23% of total system contents – limit total Upper Basin water uses to 3.56 MAF (the minimum volume reported this century)
  7. Expand the pool of parties eligible to create Intentionally Created Surplus (ICS) beyond existing Colorado River contractors, to include water agencies and other entities with agreements to use Colorado River water.
  8. Eliminate the existing limits on the total quantity of Extraordinary Conservation ICS and DCP ICS that may be accumulated in ICS and DCP ICS accounts, while maintaining existing limits on delivery of such water.
  9. Fully mitigate the on-stream and off-stream community and environmental impacts of the water use reductions identified above.
  10. After a three-year phase-in period, condition Colorado River diversions on a clear “reasonable and beneficial use” standard predicated on existing best practices for water efficiency, including but not limited to the examples listed below (state(s) that already have such standards):
  • Require removal of non-functional turf grass (California, Nevada)
  • Incentivize landscape conversion and turf removal statewide (California, Colorado, Utah)
  • Adopt stronger efficiency standards for plumbing and equipment (Colorado, California, and Nevada)
  • Require urban utilities to report distribution system leakage, and to meet standards for reducing water losses (California)
  • Require all new urban landscapes to be water-efficient (California)
  • Require metering of landscape irrigation turnouts (Utah)
  • Ensure that existing buildings are water-efficient when they are sold or leased (Los Angeles, San Diego)
  • Require agricultural water deliveries to be metered and priced at least in part by volume (California)

    Many of the elements listed above raise important questions about federal authorities, accounting and data challenges, the roles and obligations of state water officials to implement coordinated actions in-state, water access for disadvantaged communities, environmental compliance, and potential economic and social costs, among others. For each item listed, many details will need to be refined. Similarly, the plan’s duration will need to be determined. But as temperatures again climb into the high 40s in the Rockies near the Colorado River’s headwaters (in mid-December!), drying soils and reducing next year’s runoff, and the National Weather Service issues red flag fire warnings for Colorado’s Front Range, the need for bold action is clear.

    The Dominy Bypass

    Recovering water stored in Lake Powell will require the construction of new bypass tunnels around Glen Canyon Dam. Former Reclamation Commissioner Floyd Dominy sketched the design of such tunnels almost thirty years ago (see image). Such tunnels would enable the recovery of about 5.6 MAF of water stored below the minimum power pool elevation – more water than the Upper Basin states consume each year. Current operating rules and the scope of the current planning process effectively treat this massive volume of water as “dead storage” – a luxury the system can no longer afford. After Reclamation constructs the bypass tunnels, water recovery should be timed to maximize environmental and recreational benefits in the Grand Canyon.

    Avoiding a Worse Outcome

    Last year’s Colorado River conference featured a panel on the risks of litigation. Unfortunately, the continued failure to reach a deal, growing litigation funds, and the preference for repeating the same action that’s led to the continuing impasse suggest that some believe litigation could generate a better outcome (for them). Both sides have attorneys who assure their clients of victory. Yet, as Arizona learned in 1968, winning in the Supreme Court doesn’t ensure a better outcome and certainly won’t increase Colorado River flows. Placing faith in Congress could entangle this basin with challenges in other basins and other political considerations.

    Running the River

    Almost 160 years ago, John Wesley Powell – the reservoir’s namesake – demonstrated bold leadership, going where no (white) man had gone before. With leadership and a clear goal, he charted a route through the Colorado River’s iconic canyons. Now is the time for more bold leadership, a clear goal, and a plan to get there.

    Quoting Katie Hobbs on Colorado River Negotiations

    I don’t envy Secretary Burgum the position that he’s in, but we do need federal leadership. Secretary Burgum already reached out to convene a meeting. He invited the governors and the chief negotiators to DC earlier [last] week. That meeting didn’t happen because three of the four Upper Basin governors weren’t willing to go. [Nevada Gov. Joe] Lombardo reached out again … So I’m hopeful that will happen. And I think it just is an indication that the federal government does recognize the need for them to come in and help negotiate a solution.

    – Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs, in conversation with Politico’s Annie Snyder (prolly behind a paywall)

    Water is For Fighting Over, ten years on

    Ten years after I handed in the manuscript for my book Water is For Fighting Over, about the governance past, present, and future of the Colorado River, my Utton Center colleague Rin Tara and I took a look back at the book on our Water Matters podcast. Writing it changed my life, reading it changed Rin’s, and we now spend a good chunk of our time in the office we share working together on Colorado River issues.

    What of my optimism (because it was nothing if not an optimistic book) has held up? What do the current failures in Colorado River management tell us about the function of the basin’s governance network? Does my deeper optimism about communities’ abilities to thrive with less water remain? What can a new generation of water leaders (looking at you, Rin) bring to bear?

    Special thanks to Rin for what was the most fun interview I can remember doing.

    You can find it on Buzzsprout or, as they say, “wherever you get your podcasts.”

    Equity in the Colorado River Basin

    Bonnie Colby and Zoey Reed-Spitzer:

    Access to water, a concern around the globe, is constrained in many areas of the Colorado River Basin (CRB) by water scarcity, pollution and lack of delivery and treatment infrastructure. These constraints disproportionately affect the basin’s Native American, Hispanic and Black populations, groups which often have lower access to resources for mitigation and recovery. Moreover, these groups historically have not been represented in policy processes where key decision affecting water access and water quality are made. A number of tribal governments, in recent decades, have been at the negotiation tables due to their status as sovereign governments with significant water rights. However, there is no consistent process for inclusion of low-income communities of color in the basin. The urgent high-level dialogue among tribal governments, federal interests, states, cities and agricultural water users (and, to some extent, environmental NGOs) focuses on allocating the ever-scarcer waters of the CRB, with little emphasis on disproportionate access.

    From the excellent new report Dancing With Deadpool, a broad effort by a broad group of contributors to the Colorado River Research Group.