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Lake Mead's Shrinking Waters Spark Boat Problem

Lake Mead's Shrinking Waters Spark Boat Problem

Newsweek13-06-2025

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
As water levels at Lake Mead keep dropping, officials are actively removing abandoned boats, describing them as "eyesores" on the landscape, says Fox 5.
Why It Matters
Lake Mead provides essential water to millions across Nevada, Arizona, California, and parts of Mexico. But falling water levels may threaten municipal water supplies, agricultural irrigation, and hydroelectric power generation.
Lake Mead and the "bathtub ring" are shown along the Colorado River near the Hoover Dam on March 14, 2025 in Boulder City, Nevada.
Lake Mead and the "bathtub ring" are shown along the Colorado River near the Hoover Dam on March 14, 2025 in Boulder City, Nevada.What To Know
Many boats have since been removed as levels drop, officials describing the task as a priority, the outlet reported.
"That's why we want to clean up some of the boats that are left," Lake Mead National Recreation Area superintendent Mike Gauthier said in a 2023 clip published by Fox 5. "The visuals are really unattractive and don't help the park."
Park officials told Fox 5 that the abandoned boats pose a danger to boaters. As more visitors are drawn to them, the sites can become littered with trash and graffiti, the outlet reported.
The cleanup effort has been underway for some time, yourNEWS reported. As far back as 2023, officials were seeking volunteers to help remove abandoned boats from the growing stretches of exposed terrain, it said.
Lake Mead is the largest reservoir in the U.S., capable of storing nearly 29 million acre-feet of water. Close behind is Lake Powell, with a capacity of around 26 million acre-feet.
Recent forecasts lowered runoff into Lake Powell to just 55 percent of average, down from an earlier estimate of 67 percent, due to an underwhelming winter snowpack.
Lake Mead, which receives flows from Lake Powell, hit critically low levels during the summer of 2022, following years of drought.
At the time of writing, Lake Mead's water levels were 1,055.86 feet mean sea level, 173.14 feet below its full pool of 1,229, according to Lakes Online, an online resource for lake and reservoir information.
What People Are Saying
Lake Mead National Recreation Area Superintendent Mike Gauthier said in a statement, as reported by Fox 5: "We have an opportunity—and a responsibility—to clean up and protect this incredible resource. Through efforts like Love Lake Mead program, we're inviting the community to be part of the solution."
What Happens Next
A recent study found that increasing wastewater recycling to 40 percent in the Colorado River Basin could save around 900,000 acre-feet of water each year, which would be enough to supply nearly two million homes.
Meanwhile, the states that depend on the Colorado River have been in talks to establish new water-sharing agreements by 2026.

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