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Tom Blaine, P.E State Engineer May 11, 2015 Watershed and Dam Owners Coalition WATER IS POWER

Tom Blaine, P.E State Engineer May 11, 2015 Watershed and Dam Owners Coalition WATER IS POWER

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Tom Blaine, P.EState Engineer May 11, 2015

Watershed and Dam Owners Coalition

WATER IS POWER

Thank You

Watershed management

Dam safety

PMP

Providing Water Storage

All critically important and often unnoticed

jobs

Its easy to understand the importance of your work

when we consider the impacts of other failed projects

Management of a Watershed:

The Aral Sea

The Aral Sea

Aral Sea Fishing

Aral Sea Fishing

Aral Sea Today

Caption: Aral Sea. Fishing boat on the Aral Sea before its destruction. The Aral Sea was a lake lying between Kazakhstan in the north and Karakalpakstan, an autonomous region of Uzbekistan, in the south. Formerly one of the four largest lakes in the world, with an area of 26,300 sq miles, the Aral Sea has been steadily shrinking since the 1960s after the rivers that fed it were diverted by Soviet irrigation projects. By 2007, it had declined to 10% of its original size. By 2009, the south eastern lake had disappeared and the south western lake had retreated to a thin strip at the extreme west of the former southern sea. The shrinking of the Aral Sea has been called one of the planet's worst environmental disasters and the region's once prosperous fishing

The Aral Sea in 1989,and 2014

Scale, Displacement of Citizens Example:

Three Gorges Dam, China

The most powerful hydroelectric project in history, China’s “Three-Gorges dam” has slowed the Earth’s rotation down

by 0.06 microseconds.

Money Fixing the Problem?

Tanzania

Tanzania Population: 49.25 M

2007Problem –

54% of the population does not have adequate access to drinking water$1.4 billion Water Sector Development Program (WSDP) was appropriated to solve the problem

showed signs it was not working after five years, the World Bank and other organizations provided even more money without first investing in identifying new solutions to old problems. The initial goal was ambitious: to bring improved access to water to 65 percent of rural Tanzanians and 90 percent of urbanites by 2010, and continue until each and every citizen had safe drinking water.

2007Solution –

Spend $1.4 Billion to bring safe drinking water to 65% of the rural areas and 90% of the urban areas

What is the Message?

We need to •Plan•Manage •Construct

All of our projects in New Mexico

New Mexico Watershed and Dam Owners Coalition has successfully worked with stakeholders, the OSE

and dam owners to build and improve dam safety statewide

2014 Capitol Outlay

Governor Martinez secured $89M in funding for water infrastructure

projects around New Mexico include funding to repair

damaged dams.

Looking Forward

Opportunities to:

•Leverage available funding•Coordinate efforts for rehab work

•Continue to create Emergency Action Plans.

2015 Priorities

1. Streamlining the OSE permitting process

2. Water Rights Adjudications

3. Defending New Mexico’s water

4. Active Water Resource Management

5. State and Regional Water Planning

6. Building a Sustainable Water Supply

7. Indian Water Rights

Questionnaire

Risk Assessment

Risk Assessment

Risk Assessment

Risk Assessment

Questions?