"Colorado River Water Is Too Cheap, Particularly for Agricultural Users"

"A new report from UCLA and the Natural Resources Defense Council found nearly a quarter of Colorado River water is basically provided for free by the federal government."

"Colorado River water is not priced at rates that accurately reflect its scarcity, incentivizing inefficiency and overconsumption as climate change and overuse threaten the vital waterway for 40 million people and 5.5 million acres of agricultural land across the Western United States and northwestern Mexico.

That’s the takeaway from a new report on water pricing in the Lower Colorado River Basin States—Arizona, California and Nevada—from the University of California, Los Angeles, and the Natural Resources Defense Council. The researchers found that nearly a quarter of all water diverted from the river to agricultural irrigation districts in those three states is obtained for zero dollars from the federal Bureau of Reclamation, which oversees the river’s operations. Municipal water districts, on the other hand, pay an average of $512.01 per acre-foot, which is roughly the amount of water to supply two to three households for a year. Primarily agricultural water districts pay, on average, $30.32 per acre-foot. 

The report also found that Colorado River water obtained through the Bureau of Reclamation is far cheaper than other sources of water, and that the price of the supply from the river largely stems from the cost of infrastructure to move it, rather than the value of the water itself. 

“We are effectively giving away from the Colorado River millions of acre-feet per year, free of charge, or nearly free of charge,” said Noah Garrison, a co-author of the report and a water researcher at UCLA’s Institute of the Environment and Sustainability. “For a water system that is in crisis at this point, facing major shortfalls for one of the major sources of water for the entire Southwest United States, we simply can’t afford to be doing that anymore.”"

Wyatt Myskow reports for Inside Climate News December 11, 2025.

Source: Inside Climate News, 12/15/2025