Difference between revisions of "Stakeholder Page- Arizona"

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(ARIZONA DEPARTMENT OF WATER RESOURCES)
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==ARIZONA DEPARTMENT OF WATER RESOURCES==
 
==ARIZONA DEPARTMENT OF WATER RESOURCES==
  
The Colorado River is a critical resource for the long-term health and economic welfare of the State of Arizona and its citizens.  The Arizona Department of Water Resources (ADWR) is charged with promoting, protecting, and managing Arizona’s annual apportionment of 2.8 million acre-feet of Colorado River water.  ADWR represents all mainstem water users including the Central Arizona Project (CAP).  Arizona’s apportionment is used for municipal, industrial, agricultural, Tribal, and wildlife refuges purposes.  Annually, the mainstem Colorado River users utilize approximately 1.2 million acre-feet of Arizona’s apportionment.  The CAP diverts the remaining 1.6 million acre-feet of Colorado River water for its customers in Central Arizona (Maricopa, Pinal, and Pima counties).
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With more than 125 years of experience in adapting to one of the most arid climates in the United States and due to our junior priority status on the Colorado River, Arizona has been proactively building resilience and implementing innovative water management strategies to secure dependable water supplies for our future.
  
Arizona, in particular CAP and many mainstem users, is unique among the Basin States due to its vulnerability to the impacts of shortages from its junior priority status consistent with the Law of the River. In total, 6.2 million Arizonans, most of whom live within the CAP service area, and nearly 800,000 acres of irrigated agricultural land rely on Arizona’s Colorado River allocation.  Therefore, Arizona, especially CAP and other mainstem entitlement holders, are initially interested in enhancing the current and future reliability of Colorado River system through augmentation and other means to meet current and future Arizona water needs.
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Arizona’s population has grown steadily over the years, to more than 5 times and our economy has ballooned to more than 17 times that in 1955, however, through significant investments in conservation, reuse and infrastructure, our water use is essentially the same as it was more than half a century ago.
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Arizona leads the nation in the implementation of water efficient reuse programs. More than 95% of treated wastewater generated within Central Arizona (including areas served by the Central Arizona Project and the Salt River Project) serve beneficial uses including agriculture, municipal, groundwater recharge, power generation, industrial, and turf irrigation.
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These water supplies support ecologically vital wetland restoration that benefits our unique southwestern flora and fauna, as well as helping to achieve the State of Arizona’s water management goal of Safe-Yield for the Phoenix and Tucson Groundwater Basins.
  
 
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Revision as of 12:53, 30 April 2014



ARIZONA DEPARTMENT OF WATER RESOURCES

With more than 125 years of experience in adapting to one of the most arid climates in the United States and due to our junior priority status on the Colorado River, Arizona has been proactively building resilience and implementing innovative water management strategies to secure dependable water supplies for our future.

Arizona’s population has grown steadily over the years, to more than 5 times and our economy has ballooned to more than 17 times that in 1955, however, through significant investments in conservation, reuse and infrastructure, our water use is essentially the same as it was more than half a century ago.

Arizona leads the nation in the implementation of water efficient reuse programs. More than 95% of treated wastewater generated within Central Arizona (including areas served by the Central Arizona Project and the Salt River Project) serve beneficial uses including agriculture, municipal, groundwater recharge, power generation, industrial, and turf irrigation.

These water supplies support ecologically vital wetland restoration that benefits our unique southwestern flora and fauna, as well as helping to achieve the State of Arizona’s water management goal of Safe-Yield for the Phoenix and Tucson Groundwater Basins.











AZ