Collapse: Earth Overshoot Day

grarpamp grarpamp at gmail.com
Wed Aug 17 22:03:38 PDT 2022


> US Colorado river dams hydropower farm and drinking water almost dry

Another body turned up.


https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/aug/16/drastic-water-cuts-expected-as-megadrought-grips-western-us-states
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-08-16/america-s-winter-lettuce-hub-faces-withering-water-cuts

Feds Cut Water Deliveries To Arizona And Nevada, May Impact Food Production

Arizona and Nevada face deeper cuts on the amount of water they can
draw from the drought-stricken Colorado River, the Interior
Department's Bureau of Reclamation said Tuesday.

The agency responsible for managing water and power in the western US
said "urgent action" is needed as water levels in the Colorado River's
two largest reservoirs -- Lake Mead and Lake Powell -- continue to
drop. Under the new conservation efforts, 21% of Arizona's annual
water allocation from the river system will be reduced in 2023.

Nevada will see 8% of water deliveries reduced, and Mexico's share
will be cut by 7%. California will be spared from the new measures
that begin next year.

The reductions could be the beginning of a water crisis for the 40
million Americans in seven states (Colorado, New Mexico, Utah,
Wyoming, Arizona, California, and Nevada) that heavily rely on the
river for freshwater and power.

The move comes as the western US faces the worst megadrought in 1,200
years that has decreased levels in Lake Mead, the largest reservoir in
the US, to lows not seen in eight decades.

Lake Powell, meanwhile, could face hydropower production disruptions
as soon as next year, The Guardian said.

    "Every sector in every state has a responsibility to ensure that
water is used with maximum efficiency. To avoid a catastrophic
collapse of the Colorado river system and a future of uncertainty and
conflict, water use in the basin must be reduced," said Tanya
Trujillo, assistant secretary of the Interior Department for water and
science.

In Arizona, the cuts will impact water flow to farmland responsible
for 90% of US lettuce production.

    Farmers in Arizona, who provide more than 90% of the US's leafy
greens each November through March, have already borne the brunt of
prior cuts, along with those who make a living from the state's $23.3
billion agriculture industry. Pinal County, between Phoenix and
Tucson, is likely to be hit especially hard since the area known for
cotton and livestock has already seen about half its farmland go idle
due to prior water reductions. - Bloomberg

Bureau of Reclamation Commissioner Camille Calimlim Touton summed up
the situation along the Colorado River:

    "The system is approaching a tipping point and without action, we
can't protect the system and the millions of Americans who rely on
this critical resource."

Readers may recall that we noted taps in northern Mexico have run dry
for several months as a water crisis looms.


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