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    HomeEnvironmentIn $100 million Colorado River deal, water and power collide

    In $100 million Colorado River deal, water and power collide

    This story was originally published by KUNC.

    Colorado’s Glenwood Canyon is as busy as it is majestic. At the base of its snowy, near-vertical walls, the narrow chasm hums with life. On one side, the Colorado River tumbles through whitewater rapids. On the other, cars and trucks whoosh by on a busy interstate.

    Pinched in the middle of it all is the Shoshone Generating Station.

    “It is a nondescript brown building off of I-70 that most people don’t notice when they’re driving,” said Amy Moyer, director of strategic partnerships at the Colorado River District. “But if you are in the water world, it holds the key for one of the most interesting and important water rights on the Colorado River.”

    Beneath a noisy highway overpass, Moyer looked at the hydropower plant through a chain-link fence. Her group, a taxpayer-funded agency founded…

    Read full article originally published on grist.org

    Grist
    Gristhttps://grist.org
    A nonprofit, independent media organization dedicated to telling stories of climate solutions and a just future.
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