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hatrack

(59,587 posts)
Wed Jan 2, 2019, 09:41 AM Jan 2019

AZ Freedumb Fans Gobsmacked When Out-Of-State Investors Arrive, Guzzle Their Unregulated Groundwater

EDIT

Seven years ago, there was virtually no farming in Mohave County. That changed in a big way when a Las Vegas real estate developer, East Coast investors and California nut farmers were lured to the area by its nonexistent groundwater regulations. They snatched up thousands of acres and poked industrial wells more than 1,000 feet into the ground.

Since 2011, they've drilled at least 163 wells, according to county officials. The development drove county officials into a panic. The county seat, Kingman, relies entirely on groundwater for its population of about 30,000. Based on historical use and modeling, the city thought it had hundreds of years' worth of water in the Hualapai Valley Basin aquifers it relies upon. But the farms quadrupled the amount of water getting pulled out for agriculture, far exceeding recharge rates, according to U.S. Geological Survey estimates. "We are seeing extraordinarily steep declines," said Keith Nelson, a hydrologist with the Arizona Department of Water Resources, referring to groundwater levels. The data suggest "we basically have a groundwater mining situation," he said.

EDIT

Enter Cobb, 58, the determined state legislator. Cobb wrote the only water-related bill that passed the Arizona Legislature last year, a modest measure that appropriated money to study the groundwater basins in Mohave County. It's an uphill fight. A more far-reaching bill that would likely lead to well monitoring — and eventually, more regulation — failed. It was blocked by Republicans who feared it would set a precedent for far-reaching water use restrictions across the state. Cobb will try again next year. She said the rural Western mindset has to change.

She's starting by trying to convince Mohave County, which backed President Trump with 73 percent of its vote in 2016, to back her efforts. "We have always wanted to be the 'Land of the Free.' We decided we didn't want any regulation," she said over lunch. "It was all fine and good until someone comes in and wants to take all of our water. They can come in and take as much as they want."

EDIT

https://www.eenews.net/stories/1060110247

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AZ Freedumb Fans Gobsmacked When Out-Of-State Investors Arrive, Guzzle Their Unregulated Groundwater (Original Post) hatrack Jan 2019 OP
.' We decided we didn't want any regulation," Fullduplexxx Jan 2019 #1
Saudis find plenty of water in AZ keithbvadu2 Jan 2019 #2
Mohave County is a haven for fringe right-wingers; a lot of it is isolated /nt LongtimeAZDem Jan 2019 #3
And when will repugs say no to all of this? When the state is run dry? Then what will they do? SWBTATTReg Jan 2019 #4

keithbvadu2

(36,822 posts)
2. Saudis find plenty of water in AZ
Wed Jan 2, 2019, 10:22 AM
Jan 2019

Saudis find plenty of water in AZ

Our Saudi pals find plenty of American water for their crops

(Arizona is supposedly a very conservative state.)

https://www.revealnews.org/blog/debate-spreads-about-saudi-dairy-drilling-wells-in-arid-arizona/?utm_source=Reveal%20Newsletters&utm_campaign=01322dac59-The_Weekly_Reveal_11_19_15&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_c38de7c444-01322dac59-229918333

Debate spreads about Saudi dairy drilling wells in arid Arizona

By Nathan Halverson / November 16, 2015

Arizonans are debating what actions to take after a Reveal investigation showed the state’s limited aquifers are being drained to grow and ship crops overseas.

Local leaders in La Paz County, where a Saudi dairy company bought 15 square miles of land to grow water-intensive hay for export back to the Middle East, are asking Gov. Doug Ducey and state officials for help, the Associated Press reports:

“We just want to make sure the people who have lived here, who have invested in La Paz County will not run out of water,” said county Supervisor Holly Irwin.

Reveal disclosed that a Saudi dairy company and other corporations were buying large tracts of desert land in an unregulated part of the state, then drilling new groundwater wells, each capable of pumping 1.5 billion gallons of water annually for irrigation.
(more)

SWBTATTReg

(22,130 posts)
4. And when will repugs say no to all of this? When the state is run dry? Then what will they do?
Wed Jan 2, 2019, 03:21 PM
Jan 2019

Obviously don't care about the actual residents of the state or care solely about business and only business, and don't care about how long this resource can be rebuilt, if at all. Then, everyone's property values will go to zero. Hypocrites.

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