A daily compilation of significant news articles and comment
November 13, 2008
2. Supply –
Capital Press – 11/12/08
Frank Priestley
Guest Comment
Frank Priestley is president of the
A drought that's lasted only two years is creating serious problems in this nation's most populous state. And other Western states, including
If the drought in
To sum up California's problem, the state ranks No. 1 in population with over 37 million people and No. 1 in value of agricultural output at $36.6 billion in 2007. At the present time, there's not enough water to supply both of those demands. So water managers' options include first, pray for rain and make plans to dry up farmland, and second, ration water to cities and encourage people to conserve, by limiting lawn watering and other activities.
>From
Our easiest fix is to do a much better job of recharging a massive aquifer that stretches along the Snake River Plain roughly from Ashton to Mountain Home. In high water years, thousands of acre feet of excess water flows down the
It seems like a simple, proactive solution to a problem
In 2006 several state legislators and agriculture groups got behind an aquifer recharge proposal. But the legislation was devoured by an Idaho Power public relations campaign. The utility claimed if excess spring flows were diverted from the river there wouldn't be enough water to generate power and rates would increase. Although it lacked logic - the water in question was excess and would have flown over spillways and not through turbines anyway - Idaho Power's lobbying machine convinced 21 state senators to vote against the measure and it died.
http://capitalpress.com/Main.asp?SectionID=75&ArticleID=46097
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