Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumAs Of 2/7/2026, Lake Powell Now Below 25% Of Capacity; Trash Screens Visible Above Penstocks On Dam Face
https://lakepowell.water-data.com/Note: This site updates daily (or nearly so) with USBR data on water levels.

Current elevation is just below 3,534 feet above sea level, about 44 feet above Minimum Pool Pool at 3,490 feet. Minimum Power Pool is the point at which all power generation stops. Rated at 1.3 GW, Glen Canyon Dam's output would fall steadily below that amount as the water level gradually approached that level (3,490 feet).
This video provides excellent illustrations on current conditions, particularly regarding semi-cryptic notes in my title about trash screens:
Additional information below through Glen Canyon Institute:
This month the Bureau of Reclamation hosted a webinar describing possible alternatives to re-engineer Glen Canyon Dam so that it may salvage hydropower generation and continue delivering water at lower levels. For the Bureau of Reclamation to publicly discuss ideas to reengineer the dam is a very big deal it confirms the glory years of the dam are truly coming to an end. We applaud the agency for taking the first steps toward modifying the dam, but if we want the Colorado River to survive the decades to come, we have to think about more than salvaging some hydropower at Glen Canyon. We have to be prepared to transition past the dam altogether, and address the problems it has created. The sooner that conversation begins, the better it will be for all stakeholders.
You may recall that last summer, Glen Canyon Institute, Utah Rivers Council, and Great Basin Water Network released a report that highlighted the dams big plumbing problems, specifically, that at a certain elevation, it will be physically unable to deliver enough water to meet downstream obligations. Reclamation has also expressed concerns about operating the dam solely through the River Outlet Works, the lowest current release of the dam. The dam wasnt designed to run only on those outlets, and the agency is concerned about its structural ability to do it full time.
A quick recap of terminology: minimum power pool (Elevation 3,490) is the lowest elevation the dam can still produce hydropower, about 20 feet above the dams 8 hydropower penstocks. Dead pool (elevation 3,374) is the lowest elevation the dam can still release water (through the four smaller River Outlets Works that dont produce hydropower). These outlets were built hundreds of feet above the original riverbed so that the accumulating sediment in the forebay wouldnt prematurely end the functional life of the dam. In the webinar, Reclamation said the life of the dam is 100 years, much shorter than the 700-year lifespan once assumed by the agency.
With Lake Powell reservoir dropping, yet again, to a historical low, and negotiations among Basin states tumultuous as ever, the realities of the Colorado Rivers supply-demand imbalance are top of mind, and the need to think about what happens below Glen Canyon Dams power pool is more critical than ever. Its important to remember that the reservoir would likely already be at or below minimum power pool if not for the drastic efforts by Reclamation to prop up the reservoir, including: releasing more water from upstream reservoirs, holding back water from Lake Mead, and reconfiguring the annual releases from Glen Canyon Dam to be smallest in winter and spring months when the reservoir is at its seasonal nadir.
EDIT
https://glencanyon.org/reclamations-ideas-to-modify-glen-canyon-dam-leave-some-big-questions/
1 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
As Of 2/7/2026, Lake Powell Now Below 25% Of Capacity; Trash Screens Visible Above Penstocks On Dam Face (Original Post)
hatrack
3 hrs ago
OP
NNadir
(37,543 posts)1. The fan dance with the beautiful destroyed Glen Canyon must be on.
