Amid drought water flow into key Texas reservoirs reaches zero Austin

Amid drought water flow into key Texas reservoirs reaches zero Austin

Amid drought water flow into key Texas reservoirs reaches zero - Axios AustinLog InLog InAxios Austin is an Axios company.

Amid drought water flow into key Texas reservoirs reaches zero

Docks are left high and dry as Lake Buchanan recedes amid drought. Photo: Asher Price/Axios Central Texas' major lakes are starting to feel pond-like. Driving the news: The amount of water flowing from key rivers and creeks into lakes Travis and Buchanan, the chief reservoirs of Central Texas, is now zero. Why it matters: At 56% of capacity, are starting to look a lot more half empty than half full — and tensions are starting to rise along the river basin over who deserves water most. Details: The Pedernales River and the Llano River have contributed zero drops of water into the Highland Lakes for at least two weeks now, per an Axios Austin review of (LCRA), the agency that manages the river. The lack of rain and inflows is leading to dangerously stagnant water. Last month, Austin officials warned that "people should not drink or ingest water directly from Central Texas lakes" after a dog died, likely from accidentally ingesting harmful algae. The big picture: The water that flows through those lakes and downstream to the Gulf is the drinking water for Austin and other Central Texas cities, cools the South Texas nuclear reactor and sustains the ecosystem in Matagorda Bay. In July, the LCRA opted to cut off lake water for downriver rice farmers. What they're saying: "The tension will only increase," Steve Box, executive director of the Bastrop-based group Environmental Stewardship, tells Axios. After years of comity up and down the basin, lubricated by consistent rains, expect a return of the sometimes angry competition between agricultural, municipal and industrial interests over the region's key resource. What we're watching: So far, officials in Austin and other cities have imposed only mild watering restrictions. Expect drought rules to be ratcheted up soon, as policymakers play catch up with a record-setting stretch of hot weather. Get more local stories in your inbox with .Subscribe Support local journalism by becoming a member.

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