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Western US States Using Up Ground Water At an Alarming Rate

sciencehabit (1205606) writes A new study shows that ground water in the Colorado basin is being depleted six times faster than surface water. The groundwater losses, which take thousands of years to be recharged naturally, point to the unsustainability of exploding population centers and water-intensive agriculture in the basin, which includes most of Arizona and parts of Colorado, California, Nevada, Utah, New Mexico, and Wyoming. Because ground water feeds many of the streams and rivers in the area, more of them will run dry.

7 of 377 comments (clear)

  1. Cancerous tumor. by Camel+Pilot · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Some time ago I remember reading about a proposal to building an aquaduct from the Snake River in Idaho to Southern California. It reminded me of the metaphor that when a cancerous tumor grows unchecked it will commadeer local blood vessels for its own use.

  2. Why I'm on a well in a sustainable aquifer. by digsbo · · Score: 3, Interesting

    One of the things I was looking for in a house was to be able to supply my own well water. I've got the acreage, and the area is fully developed. All 2 acre lots. Never had a problem with the water table, never should. And I won't need to deal with government restrictions over municipal supplies.

  3. Re:Peak Water by alen · · Score: 4, Interesting

    US military does periodic defense reviews and the ones i saw back in the late 90's predicted wars over water shortages

  4. Re:ALL RIGHT! by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 3, Interesting

    One of the fun things about Seattle is we actually own the entire watershed here. All of it. So the suburbs basically have no water rights.

    They either buy it from us at a premium to what our citizens (who own it) pay or they buy it from someone else (at a higher premium since it has to be trucked in).

    Capiche?

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  5. Re:Colorado has California over a barrel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The water in the great lakes are already starting to drop. The great lakes consortium states would do just about everything to stop other states from coming in and taking their water. It would be the equivalent of Wisconsin trying to forcibly move all the wealth of silicon valley to green bay.

  6. Lumping everyone together.... by rahvin112 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I really hate when they lump everyone together. The fastest draining aquifer is the Ogallala, which is in the middle of the country, not the west. What this article claims is absolutely not true in 99% of the areas included in that list of states. My state, Utah has one of the most highly regulated water systems in probably the world. We have strict regulations on wells and draw rates that are reviewed and approved by state regulators that will halt all pumping if they detect subsidence in the aquifer. The aquifers are almost uniformly carefully monitored to ensure water levels don't drop, and in some areas near the salt lake they monitor to ensure positive pressure into the lake is maintained so salt water isn't sucked back into the fresh water.

    Yes there are bad situations out there, Las Vegas and Phoenix are terribly managed water systems IMO, favoring growth over conservation. We shouldn't have 6 million people living in a desert that can barely naturally support 1/10 that many. And pumping several hundred thousand acre feet of water over a mountain range for Phoenix is a terrible waste of water, not to mention the water lost to evaporation in the process and the power used.

    But this blanket inclusion of all the western states in this indictment is stupid. Those of us with scarce water resources have carefully managed them for the most part. Utah's been managing water use far longer than most states because it's a scarce commodity and always has been. There is a river in Utah where every single drop is used 7 times before discharge into the Salt Lake and the river isn't very long.

    If you want to talk about water misuse, talk about the areas misusing water and stop lumping the rest of us in with them.

  7. Re:Better late than never, Slashdot by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Interesting

    People have been talking about this ever since (and likely before) T Boone Pickens stole the water in western TX.

    Texas has uniquely dumb laws that let you suck up whatever water is underneath your land.

    So if you own a couple acres on the edge of a giant underground reservoir that spans several counties, you are allowed to drain the entire reservoir from your property.

    Texas tried to mitigate this by allowing for local water boards, but they get bullied/sued if they don't allow the resource extraction.
    Read more here: http://www.mensjournal.com/magazine/print-view/who-stole-the-water-20140623

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