Satisfying Instream Flow Needs Under Western Water Rights
Document Type
Article
Journal/Book Title/Conference
Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management
Volume
111
Issue
2
Publisher
American Society of Civil Engineers
Publication Date
3-31-1985
First Page
171
Last Page
191
Abstract
The appropriation system of water rights has been criticized for failure to provide adequate protection of instream flow values. The appropriation system is measured against 13 fundamental principles of good state water law. Within the context of this comparison, the implications with respect to accommodating instream flow uses are examined. It is concluded that the appropriation system can equitably incorporate instream flow uses, but is constrained by lack of “litigation proof” methodologies and technologies to project impacts and tradeoffs. The integration of instream flow rights is also retarded by lack of proper recognition of certain hydrologic imperatives that must be observed in order to correctly define the instream flow right. Instream flow rights must not upset the integrity of other rights within the common system.
Recommended Citation
Jay M. Bagley, Dean T. Larson, and Lee Kapaloski, Satisfying instream flow needs under western water rights, Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management 111 (1985), no. 2, 171–191.