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Proposals but no consensus on curbing water shortages in Colorado River basin

Marble Canyon in Arizona

Enlarge / A view of the Colorado River from the Navajo Bridge in Marble Canyon, Arizona on Aug. 31, 2022. (credit: Robyn Beck/AFP via Getty Images)

In 2007, the seven states that rely on the Colorado River for water reached an agreement on a plan to minimize the water shortages plaguing the basin. Drought had gripped the region since 1999 and could soon threaten Lake Powell and Lake Mead, the largest reservoirs in the nation.

Now, that future has come to pass and the states are again attempting to reach an agreement. The Colorado River faces a crisis brought on by more than 20 years of drought, decades of overallocation and the increasing challenge of climate change, and Lake Mead and Lake Powell, its largest reservoirs, have fallen so low that their ability to provide water and generate electricity in the Southwest is at risk. But reaching consensus on how to avoid that is proving to be more challenging than last time.

โ€œThe magnitude of the problem is so much bigger this time, and itโ€™s also so much more immediate,โ€ said Elizabeth Koebele, an associate professor of political science at the University of Nevada, Reno.

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In a Famed Kenyan Game Park, the Animals Are Giving Up

Once a wildlife paradise, Amboseli National Park in Kenya has become a wasteland. For Undark, journalist Georgina Gustin and documentary photographer Larry C. Price document the stark and deadly conditions that animals at Amboseli have endured the past several years, caused by climate change-fueled drought. In addition to a parched and drastically changing environment, conflicts between herders and farmers and an increase in illegal poaching have contributed to an already dire situation. For some readers, Priceโ€™s photographs may be hard to look at. Gustinโ€™s on-the-ground reporting, however, is essential.

The park draws tens of thousands of tourists a year and is a major economic engine for the region. Now these tourists pop their heads through the roofs of safari trucks, or sit inside, jabbing at their phones and looking blankly out the window, wondering how the trip of a lifetime turned into a vigil.

An Arizona town's water is cut off due to drought, leaving folks scrambling to find another source

On January 1, around 1,000 people living in an upscale community outside of Scottsdale, Arizona suddenly found their water source cut off โ€” and they've been dealing with a water crisis ever since in what's been described by water experts as an "unusually dire" situation, according to The New York Times. โ€” Read the rest

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