07/02/2010
Contacts: Joan Moody (Interior)
202-208-6416
Pete Lucero (Reclamation) 916-978-5100
WASHINGTON, D.C.--Secretary of the
Interior Ken Salazar announced today that 35,000 acre-feet of additional
water may be available for release this year from Upper Klamath Lake for
delivery to irrigation contractors. Current modeling estimates the
additional water will be available because Upper Klamath Lake surface water
elevations are higher than previously anticipated due to a
cooler-than-normal spring resulting in lower evaporation rates and reduced
irrigation demands above the lake and on the Klamath Project lands.
The Bureau of Reclamation’s 2010 Operations Plan for the
Klamath Project previously indicated that 150,000 acre-feet of water would
be available for irrigation contractors; however Reclamation’s modeling
currently estimates that up to an additional 35,000 acre-feet could be made
available during this irrigation season—for a possible total of 185,000
acre-feet. The actual amount of additional water available above the 2010
Operations Plan may change depending on conditions as the irrigation season
progresses.
“This additional water is good news,” said Secretary
Salazar, “but the Department of the Interior will intensify our efforts on
behalf of all stakeholders because the Klamath Project is still receiving
less than 50 percent of its historical average. Communication among
stakeholders continues to be vital during the current drought.”
Secretary Salazar said that the Department, through its
Bureau of Reclamation, will continue to work closely with irrigators, state
and federal agencies, and Tribes to monitor the conditions closely with the
goal being to satisfy Biological Opinion requirements, meet Tribal Trust
responsibilities, and ensure that available water is used beneficially
within the Klamath Project.
The irrigation districts will determine how best to use
the additional water. Possible options for using the additional water
include extending the irrigation season, providing water to lands not
currently receiving Klamath Water and Power Agency support, or reducing the
reliance on groundwater pumping.
Authorized in 1905, the Klamath Project, located in
southern Oregon and Northern California, is one of the oldest projects of
the Bureau of Reclamation. The Project’s facilities include the Link River,
Gerber, Clear Lake, and Anderson-Rose Dams as well as nearly 142,000 acres
of wetlands and wildlife refuges.
Additional information and the 2010 Operations Plan is
available at
http://www.usbr.gov/mp/kbao.
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Source:
http://www.doi.gov/news/pressreleases/Secretary-Salazar-Announces-Additional-Water-Releases-from-Upper-Klamath-Lake-to-Klamath-Irrigators.cfm