Anglers make short film to protest 'Million' pipeline
Project would send water from Flaming Gorge to Denver
The sun sets over Flaming Gorge Reservoir near the Wyoming/Utah border on April 19, 2010. Proposals to draw water from the Green River in Wyoming to supply Colorado's Front Range are prompting concern among local government officials in southwestern Wyoming.
Ben Neary, Associated Press
VERNAL — A plan to take billions of gallons of water each year from Flaming Gorge and send it to Colorado continues to meet with stiff opposition.
Trout Unlimited, a national anglers' advocacy group that has been highly critical of the project, held its first public screening Thursday of a video that highlights the beauty of the Green River and Flaming Gorge Reservoir.
The short film also points out the environmental and economic harm opponents say will occur if Colorado businessman Aaron Million's proposal is approved.
Million wants to build a 501-mile pipeline from the reservoir and the river to serve cities on Colorado's Front Range. The Wyoming/Colorado Regional Watershed Supply Project — better known as the "Million pipeline" — would cost an estimated $7 billion to construct and would carry up to 81 billion gallons of water each year to cities like Fort Collins, Denver and Colorado Springs.
The project began as his master's thesis at Colorado State University, according to Million, who believes his proposal will have no significant impact on the Green River.
"There is a very apparent surplus of water above and beyond all the basic needs of the (Green River) system," he said, adding that he's instructed his team specifically to "find the fatal flaw" in his proposal.
"I've said before, if there's a problem with this project, I'd be the first to put a stake in it," Million said.
Those involved in the Trout Unlimited film project, however, point to several problems with the plan.
"You know the Million pipeline is a proposal that is elegant in both its simplicity and its insanity," Wyoming Wildlife Federation Executive Director Walt Gasson says in the film.
"The notion of shipping water from a desert river in one of the most arid regions of the United States across a 500-plus-mile stretch to water lawns in Colorado seems beyond the pale for me," Gasson adds.
The Green River is home to four endangered fish species and an estimated 15,000 trout per mile below Flaming Gorge Dam. A world-class blue-ribbon fishery, it winds through three states before emptying into the Colorado River in Canyonlands National Park.
Opponents of the pipeline say the water it will take out of Flaming Gorge will, in turn, lower the level of the Green River. That would cause water temperatures in the river to rise, endangering the fish and damaging the tourism economy in the area.
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