Policty Analysis of Water Availability and Use Issues for Domestic Oil Shale and Oil Sands Development

Update Item Information
School or College S. J. Quinney College of Law
Creator Ruple, John; Keiter, Robert
Title Policty Analysis of Water Availability and Use Issues for Domestic Oil Shale and Oil Sands Development
Date 2012-03
Description ABSTRACT Oil shale and oil sands resources located within the intermountain west represent a vast, and as of yet, commercially untapped source of energy. Development will require water, and demand for scarce water resources stands at the front of a long list of barriers to commercialization. Water requirements and the consequences of commercial development will depend on the number, size, and location of facilities, as well as the technologies employed to develop these unconventional fuels. While the details remain unclear, the implication is not unconventional fuel development will increase demand for water in an arid region where demand for water often exceeds supply. Water demands in excess of supplies have long been the norm in the west, and for more than a century water has been apportioned on a first-come, first-served basis. Unconventional fuel developers who have not already secured water rights stand at the back of a long line and will need to obtain water from willing water purveyors. However, uncertainty regarding the nature and extent of some senior water claims combine with indeterminate interstate river management to cast a cloud over water resource allocation and management. Quantitative and qualitative water requirements associated with Endangered Species protection also stand as barriers to significant water development, and complex water quality regulations will apply to unconventional fuel development. Legal and political decisions can give shape to an indeterminate landscape. Settlement of Northern Ute reserved rights claims would help clarify the worth of existing water rights and viability of alternative sources of supply. Interstate apportionment of the White River would go a long way towards resolving water availability in downstream Utah. And energy policy clarification will help determine the role oil shale and oil sands will play in our nations future.
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
Subject LCSH Oil-shale industry--Environmental aspects--United States
Language eng
Relation is Version of Faculty Publications; Institutional Repository
Rights Management S.J. Quinney College of Law, University of Utah
Spatial Coverage Utah ; West (U.S.)
Format Medium application/pdf
ARK ark:/87278/s6vq6bd9
Setname ir_uspace
ID 709978
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6vq6bd9
Back to Search Results