Las Vegas Sun

May 10, 2024

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For Want <em>of</em> Water

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— Interactive by Zach Wise

Las Vegas was first settled for its springs, springs that made it an oasis in the desert. Although those springs have decades since run dry, water is still the most import resource to Las Vegas and the dry Southwest.

And by all indications the region is only going to get dryer. Scientists predict devastating effects from global warming, conservationists are calling for a halt to growth in Southern Nevada as a way to preserve supplies and water managers are looking to ever more creative ways to reduce reliance on the overburdened Colorado River. A Colorado River reservoir at Lake Mead is the source of 90 percent of the valley's water supply. Water levels there have fallen steadily for nearly a decade.

Now Southern Nevada water managers say they can no longer rely on the river so heavily, and must construct a massive pipeline to draw water stored underground for centuries in rural Nevada to Las Vegas. They say no amount of conservation can replace the need for this backup source of drinking water.

Opponents say the effects of the pumping would be devastating and that the plan would sacrifice a rural, ranching way of life in Eastern Nevada for casinos and tract home in the south.

But it's not only the lack of water that worries environmentalists and water managers alike. It's also water quality, the endangered species that life in Southern Nevada's rivers and streams and the recreation opportunities that make the region's national parks so popular.

Water is one of the most politically charged issues in Nevada today, and it's certainly one of the most important.

Phoebe Sweet

Residential Water Use Interactive

How much water do we use in Las Vegas? Tour the valley to examine residential water consumption in neighborhoods and search the usage for homes in the Sun's water interactive.

Archive highlights

The Equation: No water, no growth

Sun, Jun 15, 2008

The congressman from American Samoa was confused. Could Senator Reid clarify for him again who owned the land around Las Vegas? Nevada? The U.S. government? Bugsy Siegel?

Satiating a booming city

Sun, Jun 1, 2008

How had it come to this? A thriving region of nearly 2 million people was running out of water even as the mighty Colorado River flowed just 30 miles away. ...

The Chosen One

Sun, Jun 8, 2008

The men who manage urban water districts in the West tend to come out of the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. Who better to understand how and where Western water is ...

Water: The more you use, the more you’ll have to pay

Tue, Apr 8, 2008

The county’s largest water district is adopting “conservation pricing.” The concept is simple: If you want people to use less water, make it more expensive, especially for those who use ...

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Las Vegas businessman’s pressure washing machine recycles water

Mon, Jul 10, 2023

A local pressure washer dealer hopes his homebuilt filtration system will help customers save water and open the door for a new kind of water rebate. Aaron Muller, president of ...

Supreme Court rules against Navajo Nation in Colorado River water rights case

Thu, Jun 22, 2023

The Supreme Court ruled against the Navajo Nation on Thursday in a dispute involving water from the drought-stricken Colorado River. States that draw water from the river — Arizona, Nevada ...

Senator seeks OK for Las Vegas water pipeline through conservation area

Fri, Jun 16, 2023

A proposal to tunnel beneath a national conservation area to install a second pipeline to deliver Colorado River water to a large swath of suburban Las Vegas has drawn support ...

Nevada officials given authority to curtail water flows to homes in the future

Fri, Jun 16, 2023

Nevada water officials came away from the 82nd state Legislature with some new regulatory powers, but legislation to address over-pumped water basins didn’t make it. The passage of Assembly Bill ...

Nevada fight over leaky irrigation canal, groundwater is complicated

Tue, May 30, 2023

Water conflicts are nothing new to the arid West, where myriad users long have vied for their share of the precious resource from California's Central Valley to the Colorado and ...

UNLV-SNWA study sheds light on detecting dangerous fungal superbug

Thu, Apr 20, 2023

Public health officials across the United States and elsewhere have a new method to turn to in detecting a widespread, dangerous fungus, thanks to a recent study in Las Vegas ...

Cloud seeding catching on amid Rocky Mountain drought

Wed, Apr 19, 2023

Garrett Cammans and his brothers sometimes don't talk about their toughest moments on the job in the cloud seeding business, like the time when one of them got stuck in ...

What might Colorado River cuts mean for states?

Fri, Apr 14, 2023

The Biden administration floated two ideas this week to reduce water usage from the dwindling Colorado River, which supplies 40 million people. The 1,450-mile (2,334-kilometer) river is a lifeline for ...

Bureau of Reclamation analyzes options but withholds decision on Western water shortage

Wed, Apr 12, 2023

The federal government is weighing steps to address Colorado River water shortages, with one official bluntly stating that “failure is not an option.”

Colorado River gets some relief, but long-term water crisis remains

Tue, Apr 11, 2023

The heavy snow blanketing the Rocky Mountains offers some limited relief as water managers representing seven states and the federal government continue to weigh options for cutting ...

Videos

Dry Town, Dry Future
Dry Town, Dry Future
For 60 years, the town of St. Thomas lay beneath the waters of Lake Mead. ...

Slideshows

Lost and found
The town of St. Thomas was abandoned to the rising waters of Lake Mead in ...
Fighting an invader
A beetle’s selective appetite for tamarisk trees makes it well suited to fight the invasive ...