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Firm Yield Not Best Measure of Cost for SDS
Some critics of the Southern Delivery System (SDS) are using incorrect
assumptions to suggest the most expensive of the seven alternatives
being considered is the best option for SDS. Here are the facts:
1. Measuring the Wrong Thing: They believe the
most expensive option, the Downstream Intake Alternative, is “cheaper”
because they assert the unit cost of water is lower. They base their
claim on a calculation of the unit cost of water as measured by
the “firm yield” listed for each of the seven alternatives
in the Bureau of Reclamation’s Draft Environmental Impact
Statement for the project.
Firm yield is not an accurate measure of how much water will actually
be used. Firm yield is used to compute whether a potential option
will provide enough water to meet our future water needs during
inevitable dry years.
An analogy: You wouldn’t say a car with a big engine and
lots of horsepower is “cheaper” than a less expensive
car with less horsepower because the unit cost of horsepower would
be lower for the car with the big engine.
What you want to know with your car is that there’s enough
horsepower to do the job when you need it. Firm yield just tells
us we’ll have enough “horsepower” – enough
water in dry years – to meet our needs. You wouldn’t
use your car’s horsepower to compute a unit cost for the miles
you’ll drive over the time you use it. We don’t use
firm yield to calculate a unit cost for the water supplied by SDS,
either.
2. Firm Yield Doesn’t Measure Use: To achieve
the unit cost calculated by the SDS critics, we would have to use
every drop of firm yield available every single year.
Under the logic used to support using unit cost of firm yield,
you would measure the unit cost of horsepower consumed over the
life of your car on the assumption you would use all the horsepower
available to you all the time. Available horsepower is not how you
would determine the best value of a vehicle. Available firm yield
is not how you would determine the best value of a water project,
either.
3. The Participants’ Proposed Action is Less Expensive
than the Downstream Intake Alternative: The estimated costs
listed in the Draft Environmental Impact Statement for each of the
seven alternatives considered is based on the cost of delivering
the water we actually expect to use through 2046 – not the
firm yield available for use.
As listed in the Draft Environmental Impact Statement, the Downstream
Intake Alternative (Alternative 6) proposed by the critics would
cost $732 million – 41 percent – more to build and operate
than the Proposed Action. It would cost $558 million – 30
percent – more to build and operate than our second choice,
the Highway 115 Alternative (Alternative 7) through Fremont that
we propose to build if we can’t get approval for a pipeline
from Pueblo Dam.
The operating costs for the Downstream Intake Alternative would
be higher if we used all the firm yield available every year. These
extra operating costs aren’t included in the calculations
that were used to come up with the unit costs of water available
as firm yield.
There are many more reasons why the Proposed Action is a better
choice than the Downstream Intake Alternative. In addition to being
cost effective, the Proposed Action is an environmentally responsible
way to deliver water to Colorado Springs, Pueblo West, Security
and Fountain.
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