CSU study says full Republican River pumping halt could cost region up to $1.53 billion a year

A Colorado State University-backed analysis found a basin-wide groundwater shutdown in Colorado’s Republican River basin could sharply cut revenue, jobs and tax receipts. Lawmakers heard June 25 that about 19,000 acres have been retired toward a 25,000-acre deadline meant to avoid broader curtailment by 2029.

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Center pivot irrigation in a Colorado farm field.
Center pivot irrigation in a Colorado farm field.
"Center pivot irrigation in Colorado", by Jeffrey Beall, CC BY 4.0

A Colorado State University-backed report released through the Colorado Water Center says a basin-wide halt to groundwater pumping in Colorado’s Republican River basin could cut annual regional revenue by about $656 million to $1.53 billion, depending on how land use changes after irrigation stops.

The stakes are immediate because Colorado must retire 25,000 irrigated acres in the basin’s South Fork Focus Zone by Dec. 31, 2029, or face risk of broader pumping curtailment under the state’s Republican River Compact compliance framework. During a legislative hearing June 25, basin general manager Don Brown said the region has retired about 19,000 acres and has another couple thousand acres “in the queue,” putting it around 21,000 to 22,000 acres.

The December 2025 report, funded under House Bill 23-1220, modeled what would happen if groundwater irrigation ended across 526,431 irrigated acres in the basin’s eight-county study area.

It lays out four scenarios. In the least severe, researchers estimated annual revenue losses of about $656.2 million and roughly 2,591 jobs. In the most severe — adding a 50% drop in demand for non-grazing livestock sectors on top of land-use changes — they estimated annual revenue losses of about $1.533 billion and 5,263 jobs.

The study also estimated combined state and local government revenue losses of about $48.7 million to $97.3 million a year. At the June 25 hearing, researchers said the range for Colorado state tax receipts alone was roughly $11 million to $28 million.

The authors said the analysis has limits. They wrote that the input-output model does not capture every downstream effect, including some price changes, supply-chain shifts and the possibility that some economic activity would move elsewhere rather than disappear entirely. They also described the livestock-demand shock in the worst-case scenario as an illustration, not a prediction.

On acreage retirement, the Republican River Water Conservation District says 19,188.88 of the required 25,000 acres have been retired through conservation programs. The Colorado Water Conservation Board says more than 17,000 acres had been retired as of spring 2025 and that Senate Bill 25-283 added $6 million to help retire the remaining nearly 8,000 acres.

Brown told lawmakers the district has assembled substantial funding, citing roughly $155 million in local money, $30 million in federal ARPA support and $10 million from the Colorado Water Conservation Board. But the public record reviewed for this story does not fully itemize the local total or show how much of that money is already spent, committed or still available for additional retirements.

The central question now is whether the current pace will close the remaining acreage gap before 2029 and avoid the broader curtailment scenario outlined in the CSU study.