News
Release from
The Central Nebraska Public Power and Irrigation District
Date:
April 17, 2007
Contact: Tim Anderson, Public Relations Manager
Phone: (308) 995-8601
Central
Seeks New Water Rights
(HOLDREGE, Neb.) -- The Central Nebraska Public Power and
Irrigation District is investigating the possibility of obtaining
new water rights to help address issues related to surface
water shortages caused by a combination of drought and streamflow
depletions attributed to overdevelopment of groundwater supplies.
Central recently submitted a request to the Nebraska Department
of Natural Resources (DNR) seeking approval to begin the
water right application process.
Central is considering applications for surface water appropriations
that would allow the use of infrequent "excess flows" in
the Platte River as an alternative source of water for diversion
into Elwood Reservoir.
Diversions into Elwood Reservoirs currently come from Lake
McConaughy's water supply. However, inflows to Lake McConaughy
in recent years have been too low to justify transferring
water to Elwood Reservoir.
Irrigation deliveries, recreation and groundwater recharge
benefits have suffered as a consequence of not being able
to fill Elwood Reservoir. There is also an increasing risk
of damage to or loss of the reservoir's fishery as declines
continue.
Other appropriations being considered would provide intentional
recharge of groundwater supplies in Central's irrigated areas.
Intentional recharge would help counter declining groundwater
levels in the area and could potentially provide "offsets" for
new depletions that may be required by integrated management
plans currently under development. LB962, which went into
effect in 2004, required the development of integrated management
plans for surface water and groundwater in basins identified
as fully or over-appropriated. A portion of Central's service
area lies within an area where water supplies have been designated
as over-appropriated.
The water source for the proposed new appropriations would
be only those Platte River flows that exceed all existing
appropriations, including instream flow water rights, target
flows established by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for
threatened and endangered species, and other state-protected
flows as defined in Nebraska's New Depletions Plan.
Flows in the Platte River that exceed existing appropriations
are relatively rare and the cost of obtaining new water rights
might not be justified if not for the fact that the facilities
that would benefit from the appropriations already exist.
Central must obtain a waiver from DNR before officially
seeking new appropriations because a moratorium on new appropriations
is in effect for the Platte River.
"Somewhat ironically," said Natural Resources
Manager Mike Drain, "Central believes that the need
for new appropriations is the result of the same water shortages
and streamflow depletions that resulted in the moratorium
on new appropriations in the first place."
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