A Front Range water distributor is pushing back on a planned transfer of rights to water from the Colorado River. It has led to a disagreement between two major water agencies 鈥 a minor flare-up of longstanding tensions between Eastern Colorado and Western Colorado, which have anxiously monitored each others鈥 water usage for decades.
Northern Water, which serves cities and farms from Fort Collins to Broomfield, is asking for more data about the future of the Shoshone water right. Meanwhile, the Colorado River District, a powerful taxpayer-funded agency founded to keep water flowing to the cities and farms of Western Colorado, says Northern Water may be attempting to stymie its purchase of the water rights.
In early 2024, The Colorado River District announced it would spend nearly $100 million to buy rights to the water that flows through the Shoshone power plant, near Glenwood Springs. Shoshone鈥檚 water right is one of the oldest and biggest in the state, giving it preemptive power over many other rights in Colorado.
Even in dry times, when water shortages hit other parts of the state, the Shoshone power plant can send water through its turbines. And when that water exits the turbines and re-enters the Colorado River, it keeps flowing for a variety of users downstream.
Since that announcement, the river district has rallied more than $15 million from Western Colorado cities and counties that could stand to benefit from the water right changing hands. Those governments are dishing out taxpayer money in hopes of helping make sure that water stays flowing to their region, even if demand for water goes up in other parts of the state.
The river district plans to leave Shoshone鈥檚 water flowing through the Colorado River. It鈥檚 an effort to help settle Western Colorado鈥檚 long-held anxieties over competition with the water needs of the Front Range, where fast-growing cities and suburbs around Denver need more water to keep pace with development.
The water right is classified as 鈥渘on-consumptive,鈥 meaning every drop that enters the power plant is returned to the river. The river district wants to ensure the water that flows into the hydroelectric plant also flows downstream to farmers, fish and homes. The agency plans to buy rights to Shoshone's water and lease it back to the power company, Xcel Energy, as long as Xcel wants to keep producing hydropower.
Almost all of the $98.5 million for the river district鈥檚 purchase of Shoshone鈥檚 water will come from public funds. In addition to money from its own coffers and Western Colorado governments, the river district also plans to apply for federal funding to pay for its purchase of Shoshone's water. It is planning to seek $40 million from the Inflation Reduction Act.
Despite decades-long tensions between water users on the Western Slope and the Front Range, leaders on the East side of the mountains have stayed mostly quiet about the Shoshone transfer.

Northern Water鈥檚 recent statements about Shoshone perhaps mark the most notable public pushback to the pending deal. The agency supplies water to Front Range cities such as Loveland and Greeley, as well as farms along the South Platte River all the way to the Nebraska border.
The agency outlined its concerns in to elected representatives, including Colorado Senators Michael Bennet and John Hickenlooper and congresspeople Joe Neguse, Lauren Boebert, Yadira Caraveo and Greg Lopez.
In short, Northern said it supports the concept of the transfer, but wants an independent study of how much water the Colorado River District plans to send down the river each year.
鈥淲e want to make sure that we're all going into this with the same data to make sure that everyone's interests are being addressed,鈥 said Jeff Stahla, Northern Water spokesman.
Northern posits that the Western Slope could pull more water than the amount that has been historically used by Shoshone 鈥 enough to increase strain on upstream reservoirs that also supply the Front Range.
The River District calls that claim a 鈥済ross mischaracterization鈥 of its plans.
"Their points ignore the stated intent of the effort and are counter to the stated values,鈥 said Matthew Aboussie, a spokesman for the River District, 鈥淎nd they 100% know that.鈥
The River District published its about the matter. The agency鈥檚 director said Northern Water鈥檚 efforts 鈥渨ere received as intentional obstacles intended to threaten the viability of the Shoshone Permanency Project,鈥 and said Northern鈥檚 calls for more data collection could require a time-intensive study of the project and tie it up in litigation for up to a decade.
鈥淲e are not looking to change the historic flows,鈥 Aboussie said. 鈥淪o the intention is to protect the status quo.鈥
The River District is currently compiling data about the history and future of the Shoshone water right and plans to present it in Colorado鈥檚 water court, which is part of the state鈥檚 normal process to approve the transfer or sale of water rights.
This story is part of ongoing coverage of the Colorado River, produced by 糖心vlog传媒 and supported by the Walton Family Foundation. 糖心vlog传媒 is solely responsible for its editorial coverage.
This story has been updated to note the amount of money that the Colorado River District expects to request from the federal government.