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Entries Tagged ‘farmers’

Who’s Calling to Regulate California’s Groundwater? Regulators? (NewYorkTimes)

(May 13, 2009, The New York Times)
For the third year in a row, Mark Watte plans to rely on the aquifer beneath his family farm for three-quarters of the water he needs to keep his cotton, corn and alfalfa growing, his young pistachio trees healthy and his 900 dairy cows cool.
That is 50 percent more [...]

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California Water Crisis: 10,000 Farmers, Farmworkers Marched 50 Miles across San Joaquin Earlier This Month (SacramentoBee)

(April 26, 2009, The Sacramento Bee)
Any doubt that California is hip-deep in an epic struggle for water was put to rest earlier this month when an estimated 10,000 farmers and farmworkers marched 50 miles across the gasping San Joaquin Valley.
The goal was to heighten awareness about their water shortage, brought about by a third [...]

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California Drought Update: Due to Recent Storms, Feds Allocate 10% of Government Entitled Water to Farmers in California (NewYorkTimes)

(April 22, 2009, The New York Times)
Farmers in the state’s drought-stricken agricultural basin will finally get a meager supply of federal water to help irrigate crops this summer. Federal officials said storms in March allowed them to increase the amount of water sent to customers south of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. Water districts that supply [...]

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Californa Drought Raises Rural-Urban Tensions over Water (ChristianScienceMonitor)

(April 17, 2009, The Christian Science Monitor)
California’s third year of drought is stirring up long-standing – and usually low-simmering – tensions between farmers in northern and central California and urban consumers in the state’s dry Southland.
(Original Article Here)

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No Water, No Jobs, No Food: Hundreds of Farmers, Farm Workers and Elected Officials Protest Federal Water Cuts in California (NewYorkTimes)

(April 16, 2009, The New York Times)
Hundreds of farmers, farm workers and local elected officials walked along dusty roads in the Central Valley on Thursday, part of a four-day march to protest federal cutbacks in water supplies.
“No Water, No Jobs, No Food,” read one sign held above the crowd, expressing the frustration of many in [...]

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Farmers’ Water Wars: Water in Colorado First Come, First Serve (AssociatedPress)

(April 1, 2009, The Associated Press)
Many farmers in this northern Colorado plains region are struggling to keep their crops irrigated and stay afloat as they find themselves on the wrong side of state water rules dating back to the 19th century.
The farmers around Wiggins, population 830, recently lost a lengthy war over access to the [...]

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Farmers should Get More Water in California (MercuryNews)

(March 31, 2009, The Mercury News)
Displaying a bowl of minnows and pictures of unemployed farm workers and their families, California congressmen pleaded with their colleagues Tuesday to make an emergency exception to the federal Endangered Species Act.The lawmakers said efforts to protect a 3-inch-long fish, the delta smelt, have led to court-ordered reductions in the [...]

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California Drought Converts Water to Cash Crop (WallStreetJournal)

(March 24, 2009, The Wall Street Journal)
As Don Bransford prepares for his spring planting season, he is debating which is worth more: the rice he grows on his 700-acre farm north of Sacramento, or the water he uses to cultivate it.
After three years of drought in California, water is now a potential cash crop. Last [...]

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US Water Crisis: What is Happening in Vegas will not Stay in Vegas; Pat Mulroy’s Water-Lacking Las Vegas Offers Glimpse of What’s in Store for America; 35 of 48 States Fighting with Neighbors over Water!!! (Robert Glennon, AlterNet)

(March 21, 2009, Robert Glennon, AlterNet)
The following is an excerpt from “Unquenchable: American’s Water Crisis and What We Can Do About It” by Robert Glennon. Copyright 2009 Robert Glennon. Reproduced by permission of Island Press, Washington DC.
Editor’s Note: This excerpt is from the introduction of Glennon’s new book and follows a narrative about the water [...]

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West must Secure Water Supply, Even at High Price: California Uses Enough Water Per Year to Cover Washington State in Foot of It (Reuters)

(March 10, 2009, Reuters)
It’s hard to visualize a water crisis while driving the lush boulevards of Los Angeles, golfing Arizona’s green fairways or watching dancing Las Vegas fountains leap more than 20 stories high.
So look Down Under. A decade into its worst drought in a hundred years Australia is a lesson of what the American [...]

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Biggest Risk to Business – Water Rationing and Water Shortage: Why not Raise Water Prices Instead, which can be Passed on More Easily to Consumer? (Aguanomics)

(March 10, 2009, Aguanomics)
The title of this post is my reformulation of “missing the forest for the trees,” and the subject of the post is a new report from the Pacific Institute.
In Water Scarcity and Climate Change: Growing Risks for Businesses and Investors, the PI assesses the various risks to water supplies that companies should [...]

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Water Problem in California: How Benefit Farm, Fish & People Simultaneously? (Californian)

(March 9, 2009, The Californian)
The slogan, “food grows where water flows,” is part of a water education campaign by the California Farm Water Coalition (www.CFWC.com). You’ve probably seen it on signs and banners in the San Joaquin Valley. It’s just as true in the Salinas Valley.
There are some important differences here.
Water for farms doesn’t flow [...]

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California Drought and The Rise of Regulated-Deficit Irrigation: Almonds, $2 Billion Crop, Threatened Industry (MercedSunStar)

(March 7, 2009, The Merced Sun Star)

Kenneth Shackel is feeling more like an emergency-room doctor than an agricultural researcher these days as he helps west Valley farmers cope with little to no irrigation water this season.
“It’s like triage,” said Shackel, a University of California at Davis pomologist and plant science professor. “For some, this isn’t [...]

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Four California Water Managers — Ken Willis, Randy Van Gelder, Robert DeLoach, Michael Camacho — Speak Their Minds on “Perfect Storm” Drought: Price of Imported Water will Increase 20% in 2009!!! (SanBernardinoSun)

(Feb. 28, 2009, The San Bernardino Sun)
Water is one of California’s most vexing challenges.
Most of the state’s rainfall comes in Northern California and its snowpack is in the Sierra Nevada range. But most of the users are in Southern California and the Central Valley, where agriculture is the main consumer.
There are obstacles at every step [...]

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California Cities must Reduce Water Consumption by One-Fifth ASAP: Two Dozen Water Agencies have Ordered Water Rationing (Kelly Zito, SanFranciscoChronicle)

(Feb. 28, 2009, Kelly Zito, The San Francisco Chronicle)
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger declared a statewide drought emergency Friday, urging cities to cut their use of water 20 percent and paving the way for projects such as desalination plants and water recycling projects to bypass standard environmental reviews.
Despite heavy rainstorms this month, state officials say California’s water [...]

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Borrowing WaterThe China South-to-North Water Transfer, Mao Zedong and The Rise of the “Dam Migrants”: 12.5M Farmers Relocated; 86K Dams Since 1949 (Reuters)

(Feb. 27, 2009, Reuters)
“The south has plenty of water and the north lacks it, so if possible why not borrow some?” China’s revolutionary communist leader Mao Zedong said in 1952.
That probably seemed a great idea at the time.
But it is causing pollution as well as discontent among farmers facing forced resettlement to make way for a mammoth construction to [...]

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RED ALERT: Pat Mulroy’s Battle for Water in Las Vegas: Lake Mead Acquifer Depleted and the $3.5 Billion 327-Mile Water Pipeline; Piecemeal Water Industry Beast Pressuring Mulroy to Quit; Shasta Lake, California’s Biggest Reservoir, Only 1/3rd Full; Los Angeles Pay 7,000 Farmers to Leave Land Fallow (Bloomberg)

(Feb. 26, 2009, Bloomberg News)
On a cloudless December day in the Nevada desert, workers in white hard hats descend into a 30- foot-wide shaft next to Lake Mead.
As they’ve been doing since June, they’ll blast and dig straight down into the limestone surrounding the reservoir that supplies 90 percent of Las Vegas’s water. In September, [...]

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Undervaluing Scarce Water Commodity: Cheap Water A Thing of the Past, Says CleanTech Forum in San Francisco; New “Drip Irrigation” Technology (CleanTech)

(Feb. 25, 2009, CleanTech)
Leaders at the Cleantech Forum in San Francisco today said the days of cheap water are over.
The developing world is still struggling to provide usable water to its residents, while water shortages in the developed world have put a new focus on expensive technologies.
“Water has never been priced properly, but [...]

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Water Crisis Deepest & Ever-Deepening Dilemma in India (CentralChronicle)

(Feb. 20, 2009, Central Chronicle)
If we don’t change our lifestyle and careless attitude towards Mother Nature, India will certainly experience severe water stress by 2020.- Satish Kumar Singh
Water catastrophe is now common phenomenon in every nook and corner of India. Day by day its graveness is mounting. Even people are killing one another on the [...]

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Unregulated Groundwater in California State’s Biggest Water Policy Problem, Says David Zetland: How Price or Market Water Sans Knowledge of Supply and Demand? (Aguanomics)

(Feb. 24, 2009, Aguanomics)
The battle is getting started:
The California Legislative Analyst’s Office recommends that the Legislature turn groundwater over to the state, which would remove local control
[snip]
[farmers] say they fear that the state would require water meters, find out how much water everyone’s using and charge for it.
Valente, vineyard and orchard manager for John Kautz [...]

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Central Valley Project (CVP) Declares “Zero Allocation” Water Policy for Farmer Customers: 2/3rds of 700 Farmers on 600K Acres will be Made Inactive; Last Time “Zero Policy” was 1992 (RedOrbit)

(Feb. 22, 2009, RedOrbit)
California’s primary source of irrigation water is projected to go dry in 2009 due to drought, idling more than 60,000 workers and up to 1 million acres of farmland, federal officials said Friday.
California water officials declared a zero allocation policy for farmers who purchase water from the federally managed Central Valley Project [...]

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Federal Water Rationing — Drought in Central Valley Compounds Hardships: Increase in Drug Use, Hunger and Domestic Violence; People are Saying, “ARE YOU A THIRD WORLD COUNTRY?“; Farmers Refer to “Man-made Drought” Caused by Restrictions (Jesse McKinley, NewYorkTimes)

(Feb. 21, 2009, Jesse McKinley, The New York Times)
The country’s biggest agricultural engine, California’s sprawling Central Valley, is being battered by the recession like farmland most everywhere. But in an unlucky strike of nature, the downturn is being deepened by a severe drought that threatens to drive up joblessness, increase food prices and cripple farms [...]

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Water Rationing Nears — We’re D-O-N-E, says Farmer: 2 Trillion Gallons of Water Delivered from California Delta to East Bay Cities Each Year (ContraCostaTimes)

(Feb. 20, 2009, Contra Costa Times)

The Contra Costa Water District’s 500,000 customers likely will face mandatory water rationing in the coming months and some of the biggest farms in the state may get no water at all, water managers said Friday.
The cuts to water supplies across the state are in response to what is shaping [...]

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Water Crisis a Management Crisis in California: Water Shortages, Personal Vegetable Gardens and The Federal Bureau of Reclamation (John Laumer, Treehugger)

(Feb. 21, 2009, John Laumer, Treehugger)
Last minute negotiations may have solved California’s budget crisis; but, a far more protracted problem shadows the future of civilization-as-they-know-it: water reservoirs are drying up; and climate change is likely to worsen the problem. Food prices throughout the nation will be affected in the short-term. Long-term prospects point to an [...]

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No Water, No Food, Then What?: Stephen Chu on “The Day California Agriculture Stood Still” (Alternet)

(Feb. 11, 2009, Stephen Chu, Alternet)

Eight years of disinformation and muzzling U.S. climate scientists has left the public largely unaware of the catastrophes ahead.
Finally, we have a top administration official telling it like it is. Energy Secretary and Nobelist Stephen Chu told a Los Angeles Times reporter:

In a worst case, Chu said, up to [...]

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Hooray for Sierra Snowstorms!: But Still NOT Enough Water to Erase Dry January in California (USAToday)

(Feb. 15, 2009, USA Today)
Skiers and farmers rejoiced after another storm dropped more than 2 feet of snow in portions of the Sierra Nevada, but the range’s snowpack still is below average so far this winter.
The latest snowfall was just in time for the Presidents Day weekend, traditionally one of the busiest periods of the [...]

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The Water Conservation Debate should Start with Ag: Nothing Natural about California Ag, but Manufacturing Even More Important (JimGogek)

(Feb. 11, 2009, Gim Gogek)
When people talk about conserving water in California, it’s always about turning off your yard sprinklers, taking shorter showers or shaving without the water running. We fret about watering golf courses and lawns in the suburbs. In presentations at schools, at Rotary clubs and on public service announcements, we’re continually told [...]

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The Poor Use A Lot Less WATER Than The Rich: Unemployed Farm Workers in California, Lloyd Carter’s Apology, and The Hydraulic Brotherhood (Aguanomics)

(Feb. 15, 2009, Aguanomics)
Last week, Judge Wanger of the US District moderated a debate between farmers and environmentalists over water exports from the Delta last week in Fresno.
Although the debate included the typical give and take, the part that got everyone’s attention was this comment by Lloyd Carter, who represented the environmentalists. When asked about [...]

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Federal Water Managers Cut Water Deliveries to 140 Farms, Cities and Native Peoples in California (MercuryNews)

(Feb. 13, 2009, The Mercury News)
FRESNO, Calif.—Federal water managers plan to slash deliveries to more than 140 farms, Native American tribes and cities this year because there is so little water flowing into Lake Shasta.Those groups have special rights to California’s water, because they were drawing on the scarce resource even before the U.S. Bureau [...]

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You Can’t Rely on the Heavens for Rain: Level 1 Emergency Declared in China: Worst Drought in 50 Years (Economist)

(Feb. 12, 2009, The Economist)
AS CHINA’S 15-day lunar new year holiday began, Wen Jiabao, China’s prime minister, was in the plush Swiss resort of Davos, hobnobbing with other global powerbrokers. Towards the end of the holiday on February 8th, he appeared in a very different setting. Sporting a pair of smart white trainers, he strode [...]

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Georgia Chooses Several Hundred Farmers, Public Officials, Businessmen for 10 New Water Councils (AtlantaJournalConstitution)

(Feb. 11, 2009, Atlanta Journal Constitution)
The governor, lieutenant governor and House speaker on Wednesday appointed 300 farmers, government officials, businessmen and others to 10 regional water councils that will decide how to divide rivers, lakes and underground aquifers.
Metro Atlanta was not included in the 10 councils. The Atlanta region already has a water planning district [...]

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RED ALERT: $20Bn California Ag Industry Hit Hard by Drought: Farmers Using Water Rights as Collateral; 9,000 of 11,000 Acres of Crops Sidelined at Harris Farms; Unemployment 35% in Mendota (15%+ in Fresno); Severest Drought North Cusp of Sacramento (Jim Carlton, WallStreetJournal)

(Feb. 10, 2009, The Wall Street Journal)
MENDOTA, Calif. — Dwindling water supplies are compounding economic woes in California’s Central Valley, causing farmers to leave fields fallow and confront the prospect of going under.
The state’s water supply has dropped precipitously of late. California is locked in the third year of one of its worst droughts on [...]

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10M Hectares of Crops Affected by Drought in China: 43% of Wheat at Risk!!! (ChinaView)

(Feb. 6, 2009, China View)
Beneath a cloudless blue sky, the withered wheat grass barely 2 inches high slumped over gray, parched ground in Wei Liuding’s field.
A mere spark would set the field alight at this time of the year when the field should be green.
“I haven’t seen such a severe [...]

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RED ALERT: Where the Heck are My Hectares?: 400 Mile Central Valley “Salad Bowl” in State of ABSOLUTE EMERGENCY; No Water = No Almond Trees = No Bee Colonies = No Pollination (Dan Gleister, Guardian)

(Feb. 4, 2009, Dan Gleister, Guardian)
Bill Diedrich, a fourth-generation almond grower in California’s Central Valley, expects that many of his trees won’t make it through the year. “It’s one of the grimmest water situations we’ve ever faced,” he said. “It’s an absolute emergency and anything to get water flowing quickly is needed.”
The 400-mile Central Valley [...]

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Water Agencies Vs. Farmers in Ojai Valley, California (VenturaRiverEcosystem)

(Feb. 3, 2009, Ventura River Ecosystem)
According to an article in the Ojai Valley News, the current drought and new water pricing is creating tension between water agencies and farmers. When wells run dry, growers have become accustomed to subsidized water imported from Lake Casitas. But with rate increases intended to cover the true cost of [...]

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Napa, California Now Paying $3,140 Per AF (Acre Foot of Water) to Yountville (Aguanomics)

(Feb. 4, 2009, Aguanomics)
“The [Napa, California city] council unanimously approved paying Yountville $3.45 million for the permanent rights to 1,100 acre feet from the vast State Water Project. The city, which uses about 15,500 acre feet annually, already has rights to 20,800 acre feet each year.”
This price for permanent water rights is equal to an [...]

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Future Farmers’ Water War: Drought in the Central Valley, Water Politics and The Higher-Priority Customer (MercedSunStar)

(Feb. 2, 2009, The Merced Sun Star)
An unprecedented shift of San Joaquin River water from farmers in the east Valley to those in the west could further complicate the scramble to save crops from drought this year.
At stake is precious San Joaquin River water, which has helped east-side farmers cultivate a multibillion-dollar economy on 1 [...]

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Farmers’ Water Usage Can’t Be Discussed in Terms of Citizens’ Water Usage, Unless You Change the Score: It’s More Like 16%!!! (Aguanomics)

(Jan. 28, 2009, Aguanomics)
This post is important and perhaps paradigm shifting. Let’s see if you agree…
It’s conventional wisdom that farmers “use” 70-80 percent of all developed* water supplies. But farmers do not use water in the same way as municipal and industrial (M&I) users do. When I use water to flush the toilet, that water [...]

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Food Security a National Issue: Zero Surface Water Means No Annual Row Crops (AssociatedPress)

(Jan. 28, 2009, Associated Press)
Experts have offered a grim water outlook for Nevada and California, saying farmers can again expect to receive less water than normal this year because of a drought.
U.S. Bureau of Reclamation officials, meeting with water users at a conference last week in Reno, said the snowpack water content is again averaging [...]

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US Food Price Increases Due to Water Scarcity to Precede Fed Inflation (LeakBird)

(Photo Courtesy of Old-Photos.Blogspot.com)
Drought and water shortages may drive up the cost of food in America this year, before the Fed’s printing press can even produce symptoms of inflation. Though Peter Gleick may focus on “water footprinting”, David Zetland says it’s not the core issue.
The core issue is price. And price needs to reflect water’s [...]

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Ag Vs. City: A War of Water (Jonah Owen Lamb, MercedSunStar)

(Jan. 24, 2009, The Merced Sun-Star)

Draw a tall cool glass of water from the tap anywhere in this county, and you’ll be drinking water that came out of the ground.
For cities and farms alike, most water comes from one source — wells. Much of the water Merced County uses comes from a common [...]

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RED ALERT: Repito, You Can’t Allocate Water Out of Thin Air: Central Valley to Lose 40K Ag Jobs, $1.15B; 600,000 Acre Ft. of Water ALREADY Requested from Water Bank THAT DOESN’T EXIST (VisaliaTimesDelta)

(Jan. 22, 2009, Visalia Times-Delta)
Don’t be fooled: The latest rain offers no real relief from dry conditions that could cost Central Valley agriculture more than 40,000 jobs.
That was the message delivered Wednesday to the State Board of Food and Agriculture in a session on water conditions that increasingly are putting a squeeze on agricultural operations.
“The [...]

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Delta Blues in California: Alarmism, Inflation and Damage Control (TheReporter)

(Jan. 20, 2009, The Vacaville Reporter)
Pushing hard to build a new canal around the delta, the Schwarzenegger administration rarely misses an opportunity to point out how rickety California’s water system has become.And in their zeal to get the expensive and controversial aqueduct built, they occasionally exaggerate.
For example, when federal regulators imposed new rules last month [...]

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California Groundwater Needs to Be Metered Statewide: Only Markets will Control the Need to Use Less Water (Aguanomics)

(Jan. 20, 2009, Aguanomics)
As promised in the comments to this post, I spoke to Mike Wade, Executive Director of the California Farm Water Coalition (CFWC) about water pricing and water markets.
We had a long conversation, but here are the comments that Mike wanted on the record:

CFWC favors a “fix” in the Delta that serves [...]

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Tainted Chinese Water Supply: Algal Blooms and Agricultural Runoff (Treehugger)

(Jan. 18, 2009, Treehugger)
China’s “Dead Lakes” Keep Reappearing
Two years ago, an algae outbreak in China’s renowned Tai Lake sounded a global environmental alarm. Now, despite China spending billions of dollars on lake cleanup efforts, some algae has returned. And similar poisonous blue-green algal blooms that have been cropping up in other lakes across the country [...]

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To Protect and Privatize: Two New State Water Oversight Agencies Cause Farmers’ Protests in Peru (Reuters)

(Jan. 15, 2009, Reuters)
Farmers blocked roads across Peru on Thursday, demanding Congress repeal laws they say could put water under the control of private interests.
Protesters snarled traffic on highways in South America’s third-largest country, piling roads with tree trunks, boulders and truck tires. They also halted trains to Machu Picchu, Peru’s top tourist spot.
The laws, [...]

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Water Cost Bigger Concern for Nebraska Farmers than Water Conservation (KearneyHub)

(Jan. 11, 2009, Kearney Hub)

Irrigation water supplies and costs rated high in importance in a September 2007 survey by two University of Nebraska-Lincoln Extension specialists. It also showed that few irrigators are using new irrigation management technologies that can save water and money.
Alan Corr, an Extension educator specializing in water and cropping systems [...]

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Drought means workers hungry in US produce capital

(Dec. 12, 2008, The Associated Press)
Idled farm workers are searching for food in the nation’s most prolific agricultural region, where a double blow of drought and a court-ordered cutback of water supplies has caused hundreds of millions of dollars in losses.
This bedraggled town is struggling with an unemployment rate that city officials say is 40 [...]

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San Diego: Rural usage spikes offset urban savings

(Oct. 28, 2008, San Diego Union-Tribune)
Water districts in more urban areas of the county such as San Diego, Encinitas and Del Mar made big strides to reduce their use of tap water over the summer.
But increased conservation by residents and businesses in those communities was essentially offset by rural districts, where farmers didn’t conserve [...]

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