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Front Range cities step up opposition to $99 million Colorado River water rights purchase

A power plant and dam is shown releasing water into a river.
Hugh Carey
/
The Colorado Sun
The Colorado River flows through the Shoshone Intake Diversion Dam in Glenwood Canyon on April 9, 2024. The diversion dam -- built in 1907 -- sends water to the Shoshone Hydroelectric Plant downstream.

Denver, Aurora, Colorado Springs and Northern Water voiced opposition Wednesday to the Western Slope鈥檚 proposal to spend $99 million to buy historic water rights on the Colorado River from Xcel Energy.

The Colorado River Water Conservation District has been working for years to buy the water rights tied to Shoshone Power Plant, a small, easy-to-miss hydropower plant off Interstate 70 east of Glenwood Springs. The highly coveted water rights are some of the largest and oldest on the Colorado River in Colorado.

The Front Range providers are concerned that any change to the water rights could impact water supplies for millions of city residents, farmers, industrial users and more. The Front Range providers publicly explained their concerns, some for the first time, at a meeting of the Colorado Water Conservation Board, a state water policy agency.

The proposed purchase taps into a decades-old water conflict in Colorado: Most of the state鈥檚 water flows west of the Continental Divide; most of the population lives to the east; and water users are left to battle over how to share it.

鈥淚f this proposal were to go forward as presented in the application, it could harm our ability to provide water for essential use during severe or prolonged drought. I think it鈥檚 important for the board to understand that,鈥 Jessica Brody, general counsel for Denver Water, told the 15-member board Wednesday.

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