The entrepreneur behind a dismissed pipeline that would annually siphon roughly 81 billion gallons of water out of the Green River and Flaming Gorge to Colorado asked the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission for a rehearing today.

Aaron Million and his company Wyco, first proposed the water project to the Army Corps of Engineers. The Corps rejected the application in July of 2011 after two years’s consideration because they said Million failed to provide sufficient information. Million then proposed the Flaming Gorge pipeline to FERC as a power-generating project that would simultaneously quench the Front Range's thirst in Colorado, and received an initial dismissal Feb. 23. The multi-billion dollar pipeline would transport water more than 500 miles to a reservoir at its final destination in Pueblo, Colo.

"As presented in Wyco’s application, these hydropower projects are exclusively dependent on water from the proposed water supply pipeline," the dismissal stated. "However, this pipeline does not currently exist, and Wyco’s application does not provide any information about the timeline for seeking and obtaining the necessary authorizations for the construction and operation of such a pipeline."

Additionally, officials cited a lack of information on the route the pipeline would take through public and privately held lands.

"Until...authorizations have been obtained for a specific route or the process to identify a specific route has been substantially completed, Wyco will be unable to prepare “[s]uch maps, plans, specifications, and estimates of cost as may be required for a full understanding of the proposed [hydropower] project,” the order read.

While the initial government dismissal was based on technicalities, many environmentalist groups are pushing for a more permanent dismissal.

"Anyone who tries to divert Wyoming’s Green River over the Continental Divide doesn’t appreciate the value that it provides for native fish and wildlife, local economies and the western way of life," said Earthjustice attorney Michael Hiatt in a statement. "The Flaming Gorge Pipeline—one of the biggest, most environmentally damaging water projects in the history of the western United States—would irreparably damage the Green and the Colorado River downstream."

Hiatt went on to decry the rehearing as "a waste of taxpayer dollars," saying the FERC had "turned him down cold" the first time.

"This request for a rehearing is the same rancid wine in the same bottle," Hiatt said. "We do not expect the federal permitting agency to reverse course."

Another group is now touring the region with a short film and presentation that reflect the damage the pipeline would do to Flaming Gorge and the Green River's $118 million outdoor recreation economy. Studies indicate the lost water could raise salinity levels in the gorge and river to lethal levels for fish and other marine mammals. Opponents of the pipeline also indicate the potential downsides to mammals of building a 10-foot pipeline over the Continental Divide.

"This thing is still on the rails," said Walt Gasson, Trout Unlimited's endorsed business director, "And still constitutes — to my way of thinking — to our way of thinking, a clear and present danger to wildlife conservation in Wyoming."

For more Daily news click here and look under 'Breaking News'