The state’s decision will do little to solve a water shortage largely driven by irrigated agriculture.


As Arizona struggles to adapt to a water shortage that has dried out farms and scuttled development plans, one company has emerged as a central villain. The agricultural company Fondomonte, which is owned by a Saudi Arabian conglomerate, has attracted tremendous criticism over the past several years for sucking up the state’s groundwater to grow alfalfa and then exporting that alfalfa to feed cows overseas.

Governor Katie Hobbs responded to those calls for action on Monday when she canceled one of Fondomonte’s four leases in the state’s rural Butler Valley and pledged not to renew the other leases when they expire next year. Hobbs, a Democrat who took office earlier this year, said in a statement about the decision that the company “was operating in clear default” of its lease and had violated state laws around hazardous waste. She also pledged to “hold defaulting, high-volume water users accountable” and “protect Arizona’s water so we can sustainably grow for generations to come.”

That will require Hobbs to tackle a problem that is larger than just one company. Agriculture accounts for around three-quarters of Arizona’s water use, and alfalfa is one of the most water-intensive crops in the West. The state may have managed to fend off one egregious company, but fixing the region’s overall water deficit will involve much harder political and economic choices. “I think the governor was looking for a reason to cancel these leases,” said Kathleen Ferris, a senior research fellow at Arizona State University’s Kyl Center for Water Policy and an architect of the state’s landmark 1980 groundwater law. “But the bigger problem is unregulated use of groundwater in rural areas of the state. That’s the big elephant in the room — we are just not addressing this use of groundwater, and it’s finite.”

read more: https://grist.org/agriculture/arizona-fondomonte-farm-saudi-alfalfa-groundwater-lease/

archive: https://archive.ph/uXkiT#selection-40479.0-40499.434

  • Psythik@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Lab grown meat can’t come soon enough. I’ll be among the first to try it when it finally hits grocery stores.

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      The problem is whether or not lab-grown meat produces more greenhouse gases. In the power needed to generate whatever equipment is needed to grow the meat for example. I don’t know whether or not that’s worse than actual cows.

      • ubermeisters@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Cows are worse. We can plant more agriculture to assist on offsetting any carbon created in the lab grown meat process. We can’t do that for cows, because they’re stupid fucking grazing feeders that need way more land then the actual value of the cow.

    • eguidarelli@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Why not try eating less meat today? Meat alternatives exist already, plus a diet of more plants and vegetables is more healthy for you and the planet.

      If you’re concerned about the impact of our agricultural industry on the planet why wait for some sci-fi solution when you can make your opinion heard by changing your buying habits at the grocery store and in restaurants?