So Kris did what thousands of farmers before her have done; she
applied for a water right. Except instead of seeking to divert water
from a watercourse, she sought to collect the rain as it ran from the
roof of her house and greenhouse. To her surprise, the State Engineer
opposed her application, arguing that her roofs were
"tributary" to the San Miguel River. And since the San Miguel
River is "on call" during the summer months, Holstrom's rain
catchment would, the State Engineer argued, "cause injury to
senior water rights." The Water Court agreed, and Kris Holstrom
was denied the right to store a few barrels of rainwater.
Kris remembers her dismay at the outcome. "The San Miguel River
is over three miles from our property. There was no proof offered to
the court that the water dripping from my roof would ever make it to
the river. If it's true that someone else owns the rain, shouldn't they
pay for a roof to keep their rain off my stuff?"
That wasn't going to happen. And while it didn't appear the State
Engineer's office was going to bust people with catchment systems, the
State was not going to allow permits to be granted for rain barrels. If
Kris wanted to collect rainwater for her organic gardens, she'd have to
do it illegally. The only legal option for her, as the State Engineer
told the Water Court, was to pursue an augmentation plan.
An augmentation plan is a way for junior appropriators to divert
water from fully appropriated sources. Conditions are placed on the
juniors to protect senior water rights from the depletions caused by
the new diversions. The burden would be on Kris to convince the State
Engineer and Water Court that she had a detailed plan in place to
replace to the stream 100% of the precipitation she captured. Not only
did she have to return every drop of rain she collected to the stream,
she would have to pay for a complex engineering analysis to prove that
her augmentation water would return to the stream in a timeframe that
mimicked natural conditions.
SHE DIDN'T EVEN TRY. "The farm doesn't make enough money to pay
for an engineering analysis." More importantly, there was no other
source of water that didn't already belong to someone else. "If I
had another source of water, I would have used that in the first place.
We tried hauling water to the farm, but it just wasn't economically
feasible, even on our small scale."
Indeed, it's difficult to imagine a situation where it would make
economic sense to harvest free rainwater that has to be replaced with
some other source of water. Requiring augmentation plans for domestic
use rainwater harvesting comes eerily close to fulfilling Thomas
Merton's prophesy: "someday they will even try to sell you the
rain."
The notion that you can't utilize the rain falling on your roof
might be easier to accept if you really were interfering with senior
water rights, but in most situations that just isn't true. In Kris's
case, most of the rain she collected for her gardens would have
otherwise evaporated or been transpired by native vegetation long
before it ever reached the San Miguel River.
A recent study commissioned by Douglas County and the Colorado Water
Conservation Board has confirmed that very little precipitation that
falls on an undeveloped site ever returns to the stream system through
groundwater and surface water. The study focused on an area in
northwest Douglas County, where the average annual yield from
precipitation is 17.5 inches. In dry years, 100% of the annual
precipitation is lost to evaporation and transpiration by vegetation
(evapotranspiration). In wet years, a maximum of 15% of the
precipitation returns to the stream system. On average, just 3% of
annual precipitation ever returns to the stream.
Despite this hydrological reality, Colorado law requires anyone
wanting to use rainwater catchment to send to the stream an amount of
water equivalent to 100% of all precipitation harvested -- in effect, a
gift to prior appropriators paid for by folks trying to live more
sustainably.
DENYING LANDOWNERS the right to collect rainwater that never would
have made it to the stream seems to violate other aspects of Colorado
law. Returning to Kris Holstrom's mesa-top farm illustrates the point.
The Court relied on the legal fiction that presumes all rain is
tributary to the stream to deny Kris a permit for her small catchment
system. The legal fiction is inconsistent with hydrological reality.
But more importantly, if the rain in fact doesn't make it to the
stream, senior appropriators down on the San Miguel River have not
previously diverted or put to beneficial use the rain Kris sought to
collect from her roof.
A diversion and actual application to beneficial use are fundamental
requirements for obtaining water rights under prior appropriation law.
Since the seniors had not previously diverted or used the rain that
falls on Kris's roof, they could not possibly have obtained a valid
right to it. And since the seniors could not have had a valid right to
rain falling on Kris's roof, the Water Court should not have accepted
the State Engineer's argument that Kris's rain barrels would violate
the rights of seniors down on the San Miguel.
A faltering effort to address this problem has come before the
Colorado Legislature. Denver Senator Chris Romer introduced a bill that
would allow rural residents who aren't on a municipal water system to
store rainwater in cisterns up to 5,000 gallons. But the bill states
that users of such cisterns may still be required to replace the rain
they collect. So folks like Kris Holstrom could still be shut down by
the State Engineer, and the earlier appropriators of streams still own
the rain.
Romer's bill also authorizes ten pilot projects statewide where
new housing developments may collect rainwater from rooftops and
other impermeable surfaces. While the bill pays lip service to water
conservation, promoting real estate development in areas facing water
supply challenges may be it's primary goal. Rain collection is still
prohibited for all existing homes served by a municipal water system.
And there is nothing in the legislation to prevent the potential
benefits of rainwater harvesting from being dissipated into oversized
yards filled with water guzzling bluegrass. A serious effort at
conservation would limit the outdoor use of harvested rainwater to food
production and xeriscaped yards. It's time to heed Wallace Stegner's
advice: "You have to get over the color green; you have to quit
associating beauty with gardens and lawns."
EVEN GREATER BENEFITS could be achieved by promoting wide-scale
rainwater harvesting in developed areas. Traditional land development
practices typically direct runoff from roofs and other impervious
surfaces to pollutant-laden streets and parking lots, and then toward
storm drains. A clean water source is almost instantly transformed into
a burden on stormwater systems and a pollution problem for downstream
users. Both of these problems would be ameliorated if all buildings
were equipped to catch rainwater for later use. Additional benefits
could be realized if the water collected from rooftops was brought
inside for non-potable uses. Rainwater that otherwise would be lost to
evaporation or storm drains could be used in toilets and washing
machines and then sent to the treatment plant, thereby bringing more
water into municipal water systems. At the same time, millions of
gallons of potable water will not have been wasted on needs that are
satisfied with untreated water.
Colorado should be taking a more aggressive approach to water
sustainability. Three million new residents are expected by 2035. At
the same time, climate change will be conspiring to exacerbate the
water woes of Colorado and the other states served by the Colorado
River. A 2° C temperature increase alone will decrease mean
Colorado River flows by 29%. Couple that with a 10% decrease in
precipitation and the upper basin could suffer a 44% decline in
streamflow. So just how bad is that? A mere 20% decrease in natural
runoff translates into a 60-70% mean annual loss of storage, and a 60%
reduction in power generation.
Rainwater harvesting is no panacea to deal with water shortages of
this magnitude. But it should be part of a multi-faceted approach to
deal with a looming crisis. Fully utilizing precipitation where it
falls reduces the demand on other water resources, leaving more water
in streams or aquifers. Changing the law to permit or require rainwater
harvesting would result in millions of microstorage facilities in homes
and buildings throughout the state, reducing evaporative losses and the
pressure to build more large storage projects. It would also reduce the
energy costs incurred in treating and distributing potable water. The
Douglas County study noted that reducing peak summer water treatment
demands could help utilities delay expansion of treatment and
distribution facilities and lower peak electrical demands associated
with pumping throughout distribution systems.
THE MOST IMPORTANT BENEFIT of a legal change stimulating wide-scale
rainwater harvesting may be its fostering of a new water ethic. People
who make a personal effort to collect and utilize rain are less likely
to waste water or tolerate public policies that allow waste by others,
such as inefficient irrigation techniques or inappropriate residential
landscaping. When people are maintaining gutters and cisterns to ensure
they can flush their toilets or grow their gardens, they are more
likely to appreciate the importance and scarcity of the resource. They
might finally say no to headlong growth that shows no regard for
long-term availability of future water supplies.
Twenty years ago, Wallace Stegner accurately assessed the
situation:
"What do you do about aridity, if you are a nation inured to
plenty and impatient of restrictions and led westward by pillars of
fire and cloud? You may deny it for a while. Then you must either adapt
to it or try to engineer it out of existence." The limits of
trying to engineer a solution to aridity are now evident. Lake Powell
and Lake Mead are only 45% and 50% full, respectively, and a recent
study by scientists at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography
concludes that both stand a 50% chance of running dry by 2021.
Adaptation to nature's limits is required.
Changing the law to permit rainwater harvesting is part of the
adaptation Colorado should embrace. The legal fiction that all rain is
tributary to a stream should be abandoned. Others should not be allowed
to own the rain that falls on your roof before you can use it for
reasonable domestic uses. As Brad Lancaster, the rainwater harvesting
guru of Tucson says, "Reserving the right of catchment is one
small safeguard for water democracy."
Dan Fitzgerald is working on a Master of Laws in International
Water Resources and lives in rainy Northwest Southeast Alaska.