Water conservation works, but climate change is outpacing it: Phoenix, Denver and Las Vegas offer a glimpse of the future
by The Conversation
The Denver suburb of Castle Rock, Colo., limits water use in future developments. Homeowners are embracing water-efficient yards. RJ Sangosti/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images
When a drought turns into an urban water crisis, a city’s first step is often to limit lawn watering and launch a campaign to encourage everyone to conserve. It might raise water-use rates or offer incentives for installing low-flow devices.
While demand management techniques like these have had a lot of success in reducing water use, our new research suggests that they may not be effective enough in the face of climate change.
We looked at three cities in the Colorado River Basin – Phoenix, Las Vegas and Denver – to understand what each could do to increase demand management amid water shortages and how far those methods could go as temperatures rise and the Colorado River’s flow weakens.
The results suggest the region needs to be thinking about bigger solutions.
To ensure that water is shared across boundaries, the seven states within the basin agreed to the Colorado River Compact in 1922, setting limits on water withdrawals from the river. Since then, the region has adopted additional rules, agreements and policies, collectively termed the “Law of the River.” But despite this compact, which the states are renegotiating in 2026, the basin’s water supply is shrinking.
Research shows that the region is likely to experience more intense, frequent droughts that last longer due to climate change, putting the water supplies for farms, people and energy systems at risk.
As researchers who study the impact of climate change on water systems, we wanted to see if demand management techniques could help under these intensifying conditions.
Getting people involved can change attitudes
Many demand management policies are reactive and only go into effect when sources run low.
Las Vegas has water investigators who can issue tickets for illegal water use. Jim West/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
The survey focused on how people think about water conservation and climate change, drawing on a large body of research that shows people who care about the environment often take eco-friendly actions. Building off these ideas, we segmented the population into groups that shared similar views on water conservation and found that a large proportion of residents supported water conservation but weren’t actively participating in conservation programs within their communities.
We then used the computer model to explore how changing attitudes, and subsequent conservation behavior, could affect water supplies under climate change.
When participatory demand management works
Our research shows that individual actions, when implemented by a lot of people, can measurably improve water supplies’ reliability.
A great example of the benefits of long-term behavioral changes is Las Vegas.
Las Vegas is in many ways viewed as a city of excess; however, since 2002, the city has reduced its per-capita water use by nearly 60%, even as the population grew by more than 50%. It reached these savings through efforts to reduce seasonal irrigation, replace water-intensive landscaping and require new developments to be sustainable, along with the treatment and reuse of wastewater. Today, Las Vegas recycles nearly all of the water used indoors and returns it to Lake Mead.
In other words, climate change may create situations where water supplies are still severely limited, even after people reduced their consumption by up to 25%.
For example, under a plausible, moderately high emissions scenario, Phoenix’s available surface water supply was forecast to drop below the historical average by 2060. Even when we simulated higher participation in conservation programs, there was no noticeable change in the water availability, suggesting that any savings from reducing demand were counteracted by losses from upstream flow reductions. Encouraging people to use less water is a start, but there is a limit to how much people can conserve.
We found similar results in Denver under a moderate emissions scenario and in Las Vegas under a moderately high emissions scenario, indicating that even moderate climate change could lead to extreme scarcity conditions that are not manageable through demand-side changes alone.
What else cities can do
In these cases, it may be necessary to find other creative water sources, such as water reuse, desalination or limiting consumption in other sectors, such as agriculture or energy, to maintain the municipal supply.
Carlsbad, Calif., on the Pacific Ocean in San Diego County, built a desalination plant to make seawater drinkable. It produces 50 million gallons a day, but that water is among the costliest in the region. Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
Other solutions, such as reducing agricultural water use, require significant buy-in from local farmers and could result in producing less food.
While large-scale solutions like water reuse systems and desalination can be expensive, these costs might be necessary to maintain adequate water supply in the region, because simply encouraging people to use less won’t be enough.
※ Picks respects the rights of all copyright holders. If you do wish to make material edits, you will need to run them by the copyright holder for approval.
more from
The Conversation
The Conversation
Strongest evidence yet that vaping likely causes cancer
2026-04-09 00:00:00
The Conversation
Toxic dust from California's shrinking Salton Sea is harming children's lung growth – our study tracked the impact in 700 kids
2026-04-09 00:00:00
The Conversation
Can you survive inside a tornado? This scientist did by accident – he's lucky to be alive
2026-04-09 00:00:00
The Conversation
Handpumps bring water to rural African communities, but many are broken - study models how best to maintain them
2026-04-09 00:00:00
BEST STORIES
Travie
Hawaii's Hotel Shortage Drives Luxury Trend: Renovations and Private Residences Rise
2026-04-05 00:00:00
Street Food Guy
Struggling to Find Reliable Peptide Wholesale Suppliers Try This Solution Approach
2026-04-07 00:00:00
AllblancTV
Let's Try 30-Second Stretch for Instant Lower Back Relief
2026-04-09 00:00:00
Knowable Magazine
The troubling rise of family estrangement
2026-04-05 00:00:00
Environment
The Conversation
Hormuz closure threatens the global food supply-why grocery price hikes are coming
2026-04-09 00:00:00
The Conversation
Mosquitoes carrying malaria are evolving more quickly than insecticides can kill them - researchers pinpoint how
2026-04-08 00:00:00
The Conversation
'I watched Artemis II lift off' - and witnessed the first humans venture to the Moon since 1972
2026-04-08 00:00:00
The Conversation
'Winter crops need to be sown '‑ but Australia's farmers are worried about fertilisers and fuel