Originally published November 13 2004
Lake Powell is draining away, and environmentalists couldn't be happier
by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, NaturalNews Editor
Why are environmentalists happy? Because there's a coal plant that uses water from Lake Powell, and if the lake continues to drain away, the coal plant may be left high and dry.
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Today it was announced a major coal-fired power plant adjacent to Lake Powell reservoir may be left high and dry by rapidly falling reservoir levels, unless it receives approval from the National Park Service to begin a major extension of its water intake infrastructure.
- Environmental clearance is being sought to extend the water intake tubes for the Navajo Generating Station 120 feet to the near-natural elevation of the Colorado River.
- What the National Park services is calling a "maintenance project."
- involves five 54-inch-diameter holes being bored 150 feet through Navajo sandstone for the installation of pipes and submersible pumps to move 17 million gallons of cooling water per day from Lake Powell to the power plant.
- "This is not maintenance, but a multi-million dollar undertaking in an effort to preserve outdated and terribly polluting technologies," says John Weisheit, conservation director for Living Rivers/Colorado Riverkeeper.
- "We must prepare for the end of Lake Powell by investing resources into more appropriate energy paths such as conservation or solar and wind, not trying to prolong dirty coal and dams."
- The hydroelectric power plant at Glen Canyon Dam will suffer a similar fate, but will have to be shut down as lowering its intakes is not technically feasible.
- The Navajo Nation has benefited little from power from either Navajo Generating Station or Glen Canyon Dam over the past four decades, as many homes still do not have electricity.
- Small photo-voltaic power stations and wind turbines are now being used to provide energy to individual homes on the reservation.
- Navajo Generating Station was completed in 1974 to provide the electricity necessary to pump Colorado River water from Lake Havasu reservoir to Phoenix and Tucson through the Central Arizona Project.
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