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Archive for August, 2021

Swathes Of Libya Without Water After Sabotage Threats

Via Terra Daily, a report on water shortages in Libya due to sabotage threats: Libyan authorities have shut water supplies to swathes of the country after gunmen demanding the release of a jailed Kadhafi-era official threatened to sabotage the water network. Supplies to western and southwestern Libya were interrupted overnight Saturday to Sunday, the Great […]

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Tensions Rise As Iranian Dams Cut Off Iraqi Water Supplies

Via Deutsche Welle, an article on how drought in Iran is sparking protests, but its strategy of building dams to conserve water has devastating consequences across the border in Iraq: Alqod Mahmoud stands on the bank of the Diyala River, staring helplessly into the stagnant pond where deep waters once swelled. Diyala means “shouting river” […]

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High and Dry: The American West Is Drying Up

Via The Economist, a report on the drought in the U.S. west: Locals call it the “bathtub ring”. A white strip more than 150 feet tall encircles the turquoise surface of Lake Mead, America’s largest reservoir, showing visitors how high the water once was, and how far it has fallen. The shrinking of Lake Mead and […]

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First-Ever Water Cuts Declared For Colorado River In Historic Drought

Via CNN, a report on the first-ever water cuts declared for Colorado River in historic drought: The federal government on Monday declared a water shortage on the Colorado River for the first time, triggering mandatory water consumption cuts for states in the Southwest, as climate change-fueled drought pushes the level in Lake Mead to unprecedented lows. Lake […]

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Cameroon Fight Over Water Leaves Many Dead or Wounded

Via VOA News, a report on water related violence in Cameroon: Cameroonian officials say hundreds of people have fled its northern border with Chad after an ongoing conflict over water between cattle ranchers and fishermen killed 18 people and wounded 70. The wounded have been rushed to hospitals in Kousseri, a Cameroon border town and […]

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Small Towns Grow Desperate for Water in California

Courtesy of New York Times, a report on how California’s drought is revealing that – perhaps even more than rainfall – it is money and infrastructure that dictate who has sufficient water during the state’s increasingly frequent dry spells: As a measure of both the nation’s creaking infrastructure and the severity of the drought gripping […]

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