The Colorado River Storage Project is made up of four separate units, spread along the upper Colorado basin and its major tributaries. Also included are several participating projects located throughout the system. As a whole, the system provides a storage capacity of approximately of water. This capacity is released to meet the Colorado River Compact's delivery requirements during periods of low flow in the system. Additionally, three of the units provide hydroelectric power to major markets in the southwest. Lee's Ferry in Arizona serves as the southern boundary point for the project, which encompasses the Colorado River upstream from this point and all tributaries.
Glen Canyon Unit The Glen Canyon Unit, which consists of the
Glen Canyon Dam,
Lake Powell and the Glen Canyon Powerplant, is the largest and most important unit of the system. In spite of its importance to the system, the Glen Canyon Unit has also been the source of controversy even before it began operating in 1964. Sierra Club director David Brower, who was partially responsible for the location of the dam as part of a compromise, later regretted the decision. Recent calls for the draining of Lake Powell and the restoration of Glen Canyon by environmental groups such as Sierra Club have resulted in the founding of several advocacy groups for the cause such as Living Rivers and Friends of Glen Canyon, as well as opposition groups such as Friends of Lake Powell. Given the importance of the unit to the project as well as its impact as a tourist destination to the region, restoration efforts face significant opposition and there currently exist no plans to cease operations at Glen Canyon. Not directly a part of the project but built as a direct result of it, the
Glen Canyon Dam Bridge was constructed over the river in 1959. At the time of its completion it was the highest arch
bridge in the world.
Navajo Unit The Navajo Unit consists of the
Navajo Dam and the
Navajo Lake reservoir. The dam impounds the
San Juan River near
Farmington, New Mexico. The dam was completed in 1963, and was actually the first of the units in the project to be completed. Unlike the subsequent dams, Navajo Dam did not have any power generating capacity when built. A small plant with a capacity of 32 MW was installed in 1983 in conjunction with the city of Farmington to generate local power.
Aspinall Unit The Aspinall Unit consists of 3 dams and reservoirs on the
Gunnison River in Colorado. It is the only unit in the project to be made up of more than one dam or reservoir. The Aspinall Unit was originally named the Curecanti Unit, but was renamed for former congressman
Wayne N. Aspinall in 1980. Aspinall had been a strong proponent of water reclamation projects in Colorado and the western US in general, and was seen as a key opponent to David Brower in the fight to enact the Colorado River Storage Project. Brower was known to have fought regularly with Aspinall, going so far as to state that he had seen "dream after dream dashed on the stony continents of Wayne Aspinall". As a whole, the Aspinall Unit has a generating capacity of about 290 megawatts, or about 17% of the entire Colorado River Storage Project, making it the second most productive unit after Glen Canyon.
Blue Mesa Dam The
Blue Mesa Dam impounds the Gunnison River upstream of the Morrow Point Dam forming the
Blue Mesa Reservoir, making it the first dam the river passes through. The dam was completed in 1966 and has an electric generating capacity of 86,400 kilowatts, or about 30% of the Aspinall Unit's generating capacity.
Morrow Point Dam The
Morrow Point Dam impounds the Gunnison River downstream from the Blue Mesa Dam but upstream of the Crystal Dam, forming the
Morrow Point Reservoir, putting it in the center of the Aspinall Unit. Completed in 1968, Morrow Point is the largest and most productive of the Aspinall dams. Morrow Point has a generating capacity of 173,334 kilowatts, making it the second most productive dam in the entire Colorado River Storage Project system. It provides about 60% of the Aspinall Unit's generating capacity. Additionally, the Morrow Point Dam is the first thin-arch concrete dam to be built in the Colorado River Storage Project system.
Participating projects A number of water management projects in various locations of the upper Colorado River basin are considered participating projects in the Colorado River Storage Project. These projects are financially related to the CRSP but are not considered a part of the project itself. Eleven projects were included as participating projects in the 1956 legislation. These projects include: •
Central Utah Project, numerous dams and reservoirs in central Utah • Emery County Project, covering dams in
Emery County, Utah •
Florida Project, on the
Florida River in southwestern Colorado • Hammond Project, on the San Juan River in northeastern New Mexico • La Barge Project in Wyoming • Lyman Project, on the
Blacks Fork and Smiths Fork of the Green River, primarily in Wyoming •
Paonia Project in west-central Colorado •
Pine River Project in western Colorado •
Seedskadee Project on the upper Green River Basin in Wyoming •
Silt Project in west-central Colorado •
Smith Fork Project in west-central Colorado Wyoming's Eden Project was authorized independently in 1949. It was tied to the Colorado River Storage Project by the terms of its own authorization. An amendment to the legislation in 1962 added two projects to the participants list: •
San Juan–Chama Project, diverting water from the San Juan River basin out to the
Rio Grande basin •
Navajo Indian Irrigation Project, performed on behalf of the
Bureau of Indian Affairs A 1964 amendment added three more projects: •
Bostwick Park Project, involving
Cimarron Creek, a tributary of the Gunnison River • Fruitland Mesa Project in Colorado • Savery-Pot Hook Project in Colorado and Wyoming The Colorado River Basin Project Act in 1968 added a final five projects to the participants list: •
Animas-La Plata Water Project in Colorado and New Mexico •
Dallas Creek Project, a tributary of the
Uncompahgre River, in turn a tributary of the Gunnison River •
Dolores Project in southwestern Colorado • San Miguel Project, Colorado • West Divide Project, Colorado Four projects, the Fruitland Mesa, Savery-Pot Hook, San Miguel and West Divide Projects, were later found to be infeasible and removed from the list. ==Project impact==