Title 43 › Chapter CHAPTER 32— - COLORADO RIVER BASIN PROJECT › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - AUTHORIZED UNITS; PROTECTION OF EXISTING USES › § 1523
The Secretary must finish engineering and economic studies and pick the best way to supply power for the Central Arizona Project and to add to the Lower Colorado River Basin Development Fund. Options include building and running hydroelectric plants and transmission lines, buying power or capacity, or any mix of these, and non‑federal groups may build or operate parts. Nothing here allows studying or building dams on the Colorado River main stem between Hoover Dam and Glen Canyon Dam. The Secretary may also make deals with non‑federal thermal power plants to buy part of their capacity and have power delivered to agreed points. Power not needed for the Project can be sold. The United States will pay no more than its share of construction costs based on the capacity it gets (excluding interest during construction) and will make payments in installments during construction. Operation and maintenance costs will be split fairly by the same capacity ratio, and the United States gets credit for Federal land made available. The U.S. will not pay interest during construction, financing charges, franchise fees, and other costs the agreement lists. The Secretary must send a recommended plan to Congress no later than one year from September 30, 1968, and the plan needs Congress’s approval except for the thermal‑plant deals allowed above. If a thermal plant in Arizona uses water diverted from the Colorado River drainage above Lee Ferry, that use counts against Arizona’s allocation of 50,000 acre‑feet per annum under Article III(a) of the Upper Colorado River Basin Compact.
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Public Lands — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Reference
Citation
43 U.S.C. § 1523
Title 43 — Public Lands
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73