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SRBC recently issued its Consumptive Use Mitigation Plan that documents current and projected quantities of consumptive water uses in the Susquehanna watershed and outlines a strategy for addressing impacts from increased uses. Peak consumptive uses in 2000 were 500 million gallons per day (gpd). SRBC projects an increase to more than 1.2 billion gpd by 2025. Water for power production and domestic uses will remain the top consumptive uses, with the largest increases being from power production. The plan is available on SRBC’s website at www.srbc.net/planning.
Consumptive use is defined by SRBC as water that is used in a way it is not returned to the basin, including through evaporation, irrigation, use in products and diversions out of the Susquehanna watershed. SRBC regulates consumptive water uses of 20,000 or more gpd to help ensure adequate supplies for public water, industries, agriculture and recreation, and to protect the environment during times of designated, critical low flows (generally occurring during severe droughts). SRBC requires consumptive users to mitigate or compensate for their use during those critical flow periods.
“Mitigation can be achieved in a number of ways, including on-site storage and release of water, discontinuance of use, or payment of a mitigation fee,” said SRBC Executive Director Paul Swartz. “SRBC prefers project sponsors to select the on-site or discontinuance options because they provide the most direct and verifiable mitigation. However, the vast majority opt to pay the mitigation fee either because it may be the most viable option, or in many cases, it is the easiest.”
Of the total projected 1.2+ billion gpd of consumptive use in 2025, SRBC estimates 390.3 million gpd will require mitigation – as compared to today’s 116.3 million gpd requiring mitigation. In developing the Consumptive Use Mitigation Plan, SRBC identified and assessed numerous alternatives it could consider implementing to address the increasing consumptive uses. The recommendations include:
Swartz said, “It will, undoubtedly, take a combination
of several, if not most, of the recommendations for SRBC to secure
enough water storage to meet projected demands. Frankly, we are challenged
to even meet today’s needs. SRBC will move forward very deliberately
to implement the most appropriate recommendations to safeguard the
basin’s water supplies that support economic development while
protecting the environment.”