The water mystery unfolding in the western U.S.

美国西部水之谜正在揭开

The Indicator from Planet Money

商务

2025-01-06

8 分钟
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There's a rural area in Arizona with massive groundwater basins underneath the earth. Water should be plentiful there, but wells are running dry. Today on the show, what's behind the water issues in rural Arizona? Related episodes:Why Midwest crop farmers are having a logistics problem (Apple / Spotify) Why the US government is buying more apples than ever (Apple / Spotify) For sponsor-free episodes of The Indicator from Planet Money, subscribe to Planet Money+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Music by Drop Electric. Find us: TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Newsletter. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoices NPR Privacy Policy
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  • Npr.

  • This is the indicator from Planet Money.

  • I'm Darren Woods.

  • In December, Arizona's attorney General, Chris Mays held a press conference announcing a lawsuit against Fondimonte, a company that grows alfalfa in the state.

  • She called its pumping of underground water excessive.

  • Excessive is dewatering nearby wells.

  • Excessive is causing subsidence in a way that potentially damages infrastructure.

  • Excessive is pumping so much water that it damages the quality of the water that remains.

  • And where this lawsuit may stand out is Fondomonte's ties to the royal family of Saudi Arabia.

  • Zach Ziegler has been following the story for NPR member station AZPM in Tucson and water in general in the Southwest for the podcast Tapped.

  • Welcome, Zach.

  • Hey, thanks for having me, Darian.

  • As you know, this is all playing out in La Paz County.

  • It's a rural area, like fewer than five people per square mile rural, with massive groundwater basins underneath it.

  • Right.

  • So given that, you'd think the community would be flush with water.

  • But residents there have been complaining about their wells going dry for some time now.

  • That is leaving them with the choice to spend tens of thousands to dig deeper for their water or find a new home.

  • Yeah, and the issue goes deeper than alfalfa farming.

  • A New York based private equity firm may also be part of it.