Escaping the Dead Pool: Colorado's Water Crisis and the Path Forward
- drkomor2
- 4 days ago
- 10 min read
Nearly the entire state of Colorado has entered a designated drought. As of June 4, Governor Polis declared a statewide drought emergency, every one of Colorado's 64 counties is now under at least abnormal dryness, and 93% are in moderate-to-exceptional drought conditions. Exceptional Drought (D4) - the highest, most severe classification on the U.S. Drought Monitor scale - now covers portions of the southeastern and south-central part of the state. Local homeowners are about to open their July water bills and face a massive shock. If they use more than 21,000 gallons, they will be paying five times more than they did last year for that same water.

Approximately 98% of Colorado has entered a designated drought, with some sections of the state designated in an "Exceptional Drought" status, the highest, most severe category on the U.S. Drought Monitor scale. Local homeowners are about to open their July water bills and face a massive shock. If they use more than 21,000 gallons, they will be paying five times more than they did last year for that same water.
Don’t kill the messenger! Running for Governor in 2018 a television interviewer asked me, “Why should we be worried about climate change. It’s not going to affect us here locally.” Let’s hope voters listen this chance. According to data from the Colorado Basin River Forecast Center (CBRFC) and the U.S. Drought Monitor, the crisis is driven by three main technical factors:
The Historic User's Pool Fails to Fill, For the First Time in History
In an unprecedented hydrological event, the Grand Valley Water Users Association (GVWUA) has confirmed that the Historic User's Pool (HUP), a 66,000 acre-foot block of reserve water held in Green Mountain Reservoir, will not fill this year. This has never happened in the pool's recorded history. The HUP is the seasonal buffer that protects hundreds of Western Slope domestic and municipal water providers and enables Grand Valley farmers to irrigate their crops through the dry summer months. With only a fraction of its intended volume available, that buffer has effectively vanished.
When the reserve water runs out, the Cameo call, the senior water rights held by Grand Valley irrigators, forces junior water users all the way up to the headwaters to shut off. Calls on the HUP beneficiaries, which have never occurred in the pool's history, are now a real and immediate threat, according to the Colorado River District. Effective April 13, the GVWUA implemented mandatory restrictions across its entire service area, capping water delivery at 1 cubic foot per second per 40 acres. Ditch riders are actively policing headgates.
Exploding Vacuums
Meanwhile, at the macro-infrastructure level, the engineering dangers downstream are severe. When a mega-reservoir like Lake Powell approaches its minimum power pool, the point at which the water surface sits dangerously close to the electricity turbine intakes, turbines must be completely shut down to prevent a destructive air vortex. Water can then only pass downstream through emergency bypass tubes called River Outlet Works. But these steel pipes have a known design vulnerability: sustained use at low water levels triggers cavitation, in which vacuum pockets form and collapse with explosive force, physically eroding the steel from the inside. If cavitation forces managers to close the emergency tubes to prevent structural failure, downstream flow can drop to zero, threatening the water supply for tens of millions of Americans and billions of dollars in national agriculture.
There is an additional biological threat. As reservoir levels drop and water temperatures rise, invasive warm-water species like smallmouth bass can survive passage through a dam's internal plumbing. Once downstream, they aggressively prey on and displace native protected species, pushing river ecosystems toward biological collapse. The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation and USGS are already studying fish-exclusionary devices at Glen Canyon Dam to stop this from happening.
Record-Low Snowpack & The Warmest March
Colorado's statewide snowpack peaked on March 9 - nearly a month earlier than average, at just 51% of the median, the lowest peak since SNOTEL monitoring began. Then March arrived. March 2026 was the warmest March on record for the contiguous United States since records began in 1895, with the Colorado River Basin experiencing its warmest March at 13.7°F above normal. The heat incinerated what little snow remained. By April 1, Colorado's statewide Snow Water Equivalent (SWE) had collapsed to 22% of the median, the lowest on record. It was less than half the previous record low. The Rio Blanco snow course recorded its lowest value in its 87-year history. This was not just a lack of snow. It was a temperature catastrophe layered on top of a historic drought.
This extreme, premature heat caused the snowpack to melt weeks ahead of schedule, with much of the meltwater evaporating directly into the dry air or absorbing into parched soils before it could ever reach a reservoir.
Dismal Runoff and Agricultural Collapse
Because of the premature melt and historic snowpack failure, the Upper Colorado River Headwaters at Cameo (just east of Grand Junction) are forecast to receive only 40% of their average April-to-July runoff, the lowest volume on record in 73 years of data.
Agricultural communities are facing devastating, generational losses. The Ute Mountain Ute Tribe's Farm and Ranch Enterprise expects to receive less than 14% of its normal water supply this year. Farmers statewide are proactively reducing herd sizes and leaving fields fallow. Statewide May–July streamflow forecasts are running at roughly 24% of a normal year's volume, and that number will not improve with summer rain, because it reflects snowmelt that simply did not happen.
The Horrible Sinking Feeling
It’s a horrible feeling you have a problem and there is no real solution. There is a hard cold (hot?) reality here. When your out of water your out of water and there is nothing you can do to “make” more. So you take emergency measures to conserve, but you know that is not going to last. Then what? Well, there are some politicians with bad ideas and a few with half-way solutions.
The Defensive "Band-Aid" Strategy (The “Weiser Approach”)
Treating a systemic biophysical collapse with superficial triage, such as covering irrigation ditches with solar panels, surrenders entirely to state fiscal constraints. By failing to deploy active executive power to halt systemic biospheric collapse, this passive approach leaves Colorado completely exposed to a structural fiscal cliff.
The Corporate "Cap-and-Invest" Market Illusion (The “Bennet Approach”)
Passing "Net-Zero" market laws only targets the running annual emissions stream. It does absolutely nothing to neutralize the 900-gigaton legacy carbon blanket already trapping heat over our heads, leaving that accumulated debt untouched.
The same reactive political thinking is not going to save us. Not from drought and not from climate change, which is, of course, the root cause of our water troubles. The politicians you got to colored in bubbles for in the Primaries are the folks who got us into this mess. We need the clear-eyed, bold and determined thinking that got us out of tough scrapes like WWII.
Tier 1 Water Solutions (5-100 Year Horizon) DACR+HSDC+SCPC
There is only one real way out of our water/climate crisis and that is Direct Atmospheric Carbon Removal (DACR). Our platform executes a wartime-scale industrial mobilization to build four megaton-scale Direct Air Carbon Removal (DACR) facilities on the Eastern Plains. This will be a powerful win-win solution for Colorado, especially if we combine DACR utility with the capitol investment and heat-for-R447 exchange from a Hyperscale Data Center powered by onsite CO2-Plume Geothermal, wind and solar energy with carbon repatriation into dedicated geologic storage and long-life product sales. As governor one day one we will begin the process of deploying 4 DACR utilities in Eastern Colorado and asking the U.S. Climate Alliance of Governors to join us.
Due in part to their tremendous use of water and enerergy data centers wanting to locate in Colorado will be require to participate in the DACR initiative mandating instead closed-loop dielectric liquid immersion cooling. (The data center's continuous thermal exhaust is piped directly into our solid-sorbent DACR plants, dropping the energy requirement of carbon extraction by 50% and deploying the AI footprint to clean our atmosphere.)
Tier 2 Water Solutions (1–5 Year Horizon)
Since, thanks to all those who didn’t listen for the last 20 years, we are now in a water/climate emergency with our backs against a wall we will also need to deploy Tier 2 solutions. We will gather an Advisory Board of scientists and community representatives to determine the optimal choices. Here are “Governor Komor’s Top Picks:
Direct Potable Reuse (DPR): This is arguably the highest-impact near-term play. Colorado already passed enabling legislation in 2022. DPR takes treated municipal wastewater and runs it through a multi-barrier purification train, ozone disinfection, membrane filtration, UV sterilization, then sends it directly back into the drinking supply. UCLA's Colorado River analysis identifies DPR as the single largest untapped supply option for the Colorado basin. Arizona's Phoenix is already building an 8 MGD facility. Colorado has the regulatory framework but no governor has pushed it hard. For a campaign, it's also uniquely defensible: this is what astronauts drink on the ISS, and it tests cleaner than most municipal tap water.
500-Mile "Sponge Landscape" Initiative: This bypasses concrete-only storage and directly invests state capital to restore 500 miles of degraded wetlands and riparian zones, functioning as natural water-storage systems that slow flash-flood runoff, recharge overstressed aquifers, and serve as massive natural firebreaks.
Managed Aquifer Recharge (MAR): Rather than letting flood flows and treated effluent discharge into rivers and evaporate, MAR intentionally injects that water into underground aquifers for recovery later. USGS documented this extensively for Arizona's CAP system, the state has been banking billions of gallons underground for decades as drought insurance. Colorado has the geology for it on the Eastern Plains and in the Grand Valley. A state-run MAR program could store wet-year surplus and emergency treated effluent before it is lost. This pairs naturally with your watershed restoration deliverable, restored riparian zones accelerate natural recharge on their own.
Stormwater Capture Reform: This one is almost entirely a legal and regulatory problem, not a technology problem. Colorado's Prior Appropriation water law currently restricts residential rainwater harvesting to 110 gallons, two 55-gallon barrels. The Pacific Institute calculated that allowing 500-gallon cisterns at scale across Colorado's urban basins could offset a meaningful fraction of outdoor residential demand. Neighborhood- and city-scale stormwater infrastructure (retention basins, permeable pavement, green roofs) could capture runoff that currently flashes into storm drains. The executive lever here is straightforward: direct the Colorado Water Conservation Board to fast-track augmentation plan approvals for urban stormwater capture projects, removing the legal bottleneck without a constitutional fight.
Agricultural Water Efficiency Mandates with State Co-Investment: Agriculture consumes roughly 85–90% of Colorado's consumptive water use. Precision irrigation, soil moisture sensors, drip systems, weather-integrated scheduling, consistently delivers 35–45% reductions in water use without yield loss. Utah ran a $200M state investment program pairing federal relief money with matching grants for irrigation upgrades and achieved massive adoption rapidly. The political framing matters: this is not a taking, it is a co-investment. State pays half, farmer keeps the water savings as a marketable asset. This is also where your Alternative Transfer Methods (ATMs) framework fits, Colorado Law's Water Policy Program has already designed a "water bank" model that lets farmers temporarily lease conserved water to cities without permanently losing their agricultural water rights, preventing the "buy and dry" outcome that hollows out rural communities.
Cloud Seeding - Scaled and Sustained: This one is real but bounded. Yale E360 and UC-Boulder atmospheric science confirm cloud seeding works - it reliably increases orographic (mountain) precipitation by 5–15% when practiced continuously, not as a drought emergency response. A 1981 Upper Colorado River Commission study projected that a basin-wide program could generate up to 1.38 million acre-feet of additional annual runoff. The key is "continuous" - seeding must happen in both wet and dry years to keep reservoirs topped. Colorado has had sporadic, underfunded programs. A governor-directed, state-funded continuous cloud seeding program over the major mountain ranges is achievable within a single budget cycle and represents genuinely new water at low cost.
Atmospheric Water Harvesting (AWH) - Targeted Deployment: This is still emerging at grid scale but is viable right now for rural, tribal, and agricultural communities that cannot wait for infrastructure. Berkeley's MOF-based technology (Atoco) and SOURCE Hydropanels operate on solar power alone, extracting water from air even below 20% humidity. A 5x5m station in Nevada-equivalent climate produces roughly 3,000 liters per day. This is not a statewide solution but is the right tool for the Ute Mountain Ute situation and other communities facing total supply failure - deployable in weeks, not years.
Brackish Groundwater Desalination: Colorado has extensive brackish (slightly saline) groundwater deposits on the Eastern Plains that are currently unusable for drinking or irrigation. Inland reverse-osmosis desalination is far cheaper than ocean desalination and could unlock a substantial new water source. The EPA has documented brackish aquifer potential across the mountain west. The remaining challenge is brine disposal, a state-level engineering program that co-locates brine concentrate with industrial uses (mineral extraction, oilfield injection) could make this economically workable.
Cluster | Deliverable Label | Core Mechanism |
Supply Creation | DPR + MAR + Cloud Seeding | New water into the system |
Demand Reduction | Ag Efficiency Mandates + ATMs | Less water consumed per unit of economic output |
Legal/Regulatory Unlock | Stormwater Capture Reform | Remove the legal bottleneck, not the infrastructure one |
Emergency/Tribal | AWH + Brackish Desal | Off-grid supply for communities facing immediate failure |
Checking a traditional corporate box on the ballot is no longer a viable option. It is signing Colorado's ecological and fiscal bankruptcy warrant. Our opponents are fighting over feel-good, symbolic linear compromises while the clock runs out. Writing in a scientist with a legally compliant, off-grid infrastructure blueprint is the only authentic action a voter can take to stop managing planetary decline and start reversing it.
None of our solutions require waiting for a federal approval, a constitutional amendment, or new technology. A governor with executive will can move all of them simultaneously and we will. At the Christian Komor for Colorado Governor campaign we know the hard-hitting ongoing drought conditions our state is facing are unnerving even for seasoned westerners. We can get you through this, but first you have to remember to forget the bubble-heads and WRITE-IN your vote for “Christian Komor” in November. We can fix this together.
NOTE: Under Article X, Section 20 of the Colorado Constitution, any government-owned enterprise that operates on a business-driven fee-for-service model and receives less than 10% of its annual operational capital from direct state grants is 100% exempt from TABOR fiscal limits (Deliverable 9). By routing our infrastructure through self-funding entities, funded by commercial carbon sequestration leases of state-owned underground pore space, data center co-location licensing, and corporate infrastructure levies, we protect the state budget and completely insulate the Colorado taxpayer from financial risk (Deliverable 10/Phase III).
SOURCES
U.S. Drought Monitor - Colorado State Page: https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/CurrentMap/StateDroughtMonitor.aspx?CO
Governor Polis Statewide Drought Emergency Declaration (June 4, 2026): https://www.koaa.com/news/local-news/soco-public-safety/governor-polis-declares-statewide-drought-emergency-activates-phase-3-of-response-plan
GVWUA Mandatory Restrictions / HUP Dead Pool - Western Slope Trellis (April 21, 2026): https://www.westernslopetrellis.com/2026-spring-irrigation-and-water-supply-report/
HUP Shortage Analysis - Aspen Journalism (April 17, 2026):
HUP and Vail Area Water Rights - Vail Daily (June 2, 2026): https://www.vaildaily.com/news/grand-valley-can-but-hasnt-asserted-rights-to-water-being-used-in-vail-area/
Rio Blanco Snow Course Record Low - USDA NRCS Colorado Water Supply Outlook: https://www.wcc.nrcs.usda.gov/ftpref/support/states/CO/BORCO/borco426.pdf
Upper Colorado SWE 19-22% of Median - Western Slope Trellis (April 21, 2026): https://www.westernslopetrellis.com/2026-spring-irrigation-and-water-supply-report/
Colorado Snowpack April 1 at 22% of Median - Colorado Climate Center / KOAA (April 2, 2026): https://www.koaa.com/weather/weather-science/historic-heat-wave-southern-colorado-records-hottest-march-on-record
March 2026 Warmest on Record (NOAA) - The Weather Channel: https://weather.com/news/climate/news/2026-04-07-us-record-warm-march-2026
March 2026 Warmest on Record - ABC News (April 8, 2026): https://abcnews.com/US/us-hottest-march-historic-margin/story?id=131846633
Upper Colorado River Cameo 40% of Average Runoff - Western Slope Trellis (April 21, 2026): https://www.westernslopetrellis.com/2026-spring-irrigation-and-water-supply-report/
Ute Mountain Ute Tribe < 14% of Normal Water Supply - Colorado Sun (April 27, 2026): https://coloradosun.com/2026/04/27/colorado-farmers-water-supply-summer-drought/
Lake Powell Dead Pool = 1.7 million acre-feet - Colorado Sun Explainer: https://coloradosun.com/2023/08/04/lake-powell-colorado-river-explainer/
Smallmouth Bass Threat at Glen Canyon Dam - The Atlantic (2023): https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2023/10/colorado-river-conservation-smallmouth-bass/675568/
Smallmouth Bass Barrier Delays - Center for Biological Diversity (April 17, 2026): https://biologicaldiversity.org/w/news/press-releases/risks-to-grand-canyons-endangered-fish-grow-as-colorado-river-declines-invasive-fish-barriers-delayed-2026-04-17/




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