Arizona mismanages water. Don't get smug about it, Bucky

You might have seen a long The New York Times piece Thursday about Arizona's disappearing groundwater due to ridiculous law and industrial-scale agriculture, including this: 
In 2014, a Saudi Arabian-owned company, the Almarai Corporation, bought 10,000 acres in the town of Vicksburg, northwest of Sulphur Springs Valley, planting alfalfa to ship halfway around the world to feed Saudi cattle. Then, a United Arab Emirates farming corporation, Al Dahra, bought several thousand-acre farms along both sides of the Arizona-California border. These purchases were perfectly legal, but many residents felt these newcomers were essentially “exporting water.” 
That nugget from the Times story sound familiar, as I'd referenced it in this 2015 post:
Water use and abuse, here and there  
Keep reading if you want to know why... Saudi Arabia is using Arizona desert groundwater to grow and harvest huge amounts of even thirstier alfalfa for shipment to dairy cattle operations in the parched Saudi desert.
Sounds crazy, right, but hold on Bucky and take in few home-state matters.

* If repeatedly cavalier use of water for commercial purposes grinds your gears, then consider that it's not uncommon for the Little Plover River right here in Wisconsin to dry up in summertime because heavy pumping by nearby big farms leaves the trout to die.


I've written about it more than once, and posted photos which originated with River Alliance of Wisconsin.

River Alliance of Wisconsin photos

Dead Brookie
* Water-for-business-growth underscores Foxconn's controversial pursuit of Great Lakes water diverted from Lake Michigan - - combined with a return to the lake of a portion after its use in proprietary, chemical-laden processes - - to produce liquid crystal display screens for televisions and other devices. 

*  Waukesha's separate diversion of Lake Michigan water always had a business-development component.

Through a spokesman, business organizations,in Southeastern Wisconsin, had the same idea for Waukesha and beyond, as I noted in 2010:
“Waukesha… has the potential to serve as a template for responsible intra-basin diversions,” he said. “If you proceed from the premise that access to Great Lakes water is an economic advantage, it’s to our region’s advantage to draw who has access as broadly as possible. We want to be sure we are maximizing our regional advantage with the competitive advantage we were able to get in the (Great Lakes Water Compact).”
Opening the Great Lakes spigot to assist business was backed by the metro home builders association's leader Matt Moroney, a strong proponent of the Waukesha diversion.

In comments submitted to a state legislative council several years ago, Moroney opposed the pending Great Lakes Compact which eventually was approved and established barriers - -which are not insurmountable - -in front of certain diversions. The link contains Moroney's comments in full. This section has always caught my eye:
I have heard several arguments that being located next to the Great Lakes will become an economic advantage for Wisconsin in the years to come. However, if the water cannot be utilized for economic growth, being located next to the Great Lakes will put Wisconsin at an economic disadvantage. 
So it's not surprising that Moroney is Wisconsin's newly-appointed liaison to Foxconn, having progressed in Walker's 'chamber of commerce mentality' administration from Deputy Secretary of the DNR, to a senior Walker office position to the newly-created contact position for Foxconn.

Now I'm not saying that these examples are as concerning or egregious as is growing grain in the Arizona desert for export to Saudi dairies. 


But think about the diversion precedents Wisconsin is establishing in the region while none of the seven other Great Lakes states has made a diversion application.


And look also at our baffling tolerance for contaminated rivers, algae-polluted lakes and manure-laden drinking water, and you will see an corporate-friendly but unacceptably foul picture of water abuse come into focus right here.

Is 'We're not as reckless as Arizona' a worthy state slogan, let alone the guiding water management philosophy we really want?


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