America's food growing regions face a crisis of "catastrophic"
proportions as historic drought continues to drive the nation's largest
water reserves to record lows. Amidst the shortages, private landowners
are facing harsh criticism for seeking profits from this dwindling
public resource.
“We’re headed for a brick wall at 100 miles per
hour,” said James Mahan, a scientist at the USDA’s Agricultural Research
Service lab in Lubbock, Texas. “And, really, the effects of climate change are branches hitting the windshield along the way.”
Mahan was specifically referring to the depletion of the Ogallala
Aquifer, an underground reserve that spreads 111.8 million acres across
eight states and provides water to much of Texas as well as to the
millions of acres of farmland that make up "America's Breadbasket." According to NBC News,
after years of "punishing drought" and chronic mismanagement, the
Ogallala now faces "catastrophic depletion," with profound implications
for the millions worldwide fed by the farms which rely on the aquifer.
The draining of the Ogallala is also indicative of what is happening to water sources across the western United States.
According to the latest
assessment by the U.S. Drought Monitor, huge swaths of California,
Nevada, Texas and Oklahoma are experiencing "extreme" or "exceptional"
drought. In June, nearly 80 percent of California was under "extreme"
drought conditions while the area considered to be in the highest
category of drought—"exceptional"—continues to grow.
This week, Lake Mead—the country's largest reservoir which provides
up to 40 million people in the U.S. and Mexico with a portion of their
drinking water—is also expected to reach a record low, according to estimates by the federal Bureau of Reclamation.
As reserves are drying up, reports of landowners "cashing in" on the
water market highlight the dangers of granting private control to this
essential public resource.
In California, where the price of water has increased tenfold in the
past five years, private landowners and water districts alike are
driving the cost up further and making millions by auctioning off their
private water reserves, AP recently reported.
And as NBC highlights, the Ogallala crisis has been driven
largely by Texas' "right to capture" law, which has enabled wealthy
landowners to capitalize on the crisis. The law—which essentially states
that "If you own the land, you and only you own the water"—has
reportedly enabled oil tycoon T. Boone Pickens to sell the water from
beneath his sprawling 211,000 acre ranch to water-impoverished
municipalities for $103 million.
“Here’s a guy selling a natural resource which is almost universally
recognized – except in Texas – as a public resource,” observed Burke
Griggs, Ph.D., consulting professor at the Bill Lane Center for the
American West at Stanford University.
from here
No comments:
Post a Comment