Water News - US
Across the United States this week, water is at the center of both crisis and innovation. In the Southwest, Colorado Public Radio reports that Colorado has enacted a new law to curb so called buy and dry transfers in the Arkansas River Basin, a long standing practice where cities purchase farmland water rights and leave fields barren, draining rural economies and river flows. The law encourages more flexible sharing and leasing so irrigation water can support both agriculture and growing cities instead of permanently drying out farm communities. At the same time, Cronkite News in Arizona reports that the state faces a potential seventy seven percent cut in its share of the Colorado River as negotiations with other basin states remain deadlocked, underscoring how overuse and drought are forcing painful choices about who gets limited river water. Farther north, the Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy says a new ten million dollar investment, including six and a half million dollars from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, will accelerate cleanup of contaminated sediment and habitat restoration in the Detroit River, a legacy pollution hotspot linking the United States and Canada. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is also announcing more than twenty two million dollars to protect residents of the U.S. Virgin Islands from exposure to lead in drinking water, part of a broader national push to replace aging pipes and improve drinking water infrastructure. Corporate America is being pulled into the water conversation as well. Fortune reports that nonprofit Water dot org, co founded by actor Matt Damon and engineer Gary White, has launched the Get Blue campaign with Gap, Starbucks, Amazon, and other partners, aiming to channel everyday purchases into microloans for safe water and sanitation projects worldwide. Gap is pledging five dollars per special item sold, Starbucks is tying donations to new blue themed summer drinks, and Amazon is linking its Alexa and music platforms to automatic contributions, highlighting how consumer behavior is being leveraged to address the global water crisis. These stories reveal a clear pattern. In the United States, water policy is shifting from limitless extraction toward conservation, cleanup, and more flexible sharing, while globally, new finance and corporate partnerships are emerging to deliver basic water access. Together, they show that water is no longer an invisible utility but a defining resource challenge for economies, communities, and the climate. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai
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