About 40 million people and 5.5 million acres of cropland depend on the Colorado for drinking water and irrigation, but its flow has gradually diminished over the past two decades as the climate becomes warmer and more arid across the West. Now the arcane system of water rights governing the river entitles each state and Mexico to far more water than is actually available. The rules prioritize the longest-established uses of water, in many cases dating to the 1850s and 1860s.
Not really discussed much: the water mostly goes to food for cows and cars, not people


The account of alfalfa here on the western slope of Colorado is insane considering the decades long drought…
What is alfafa used for there? Animal feed?
Its basically a way to export water internationally, alfalfa takes a huge amount of water to grow, so grow it here where the water laws are basically whoever has money wins, and they ship it out.
Animal feed but a lot of it is exported. It’s one of those crops that if it was only produced for internal use wouldn’t be so bad but a lot of it is exported while also being exported.
Yes, unsure if it’s staying local though, if I’m remembering articles from a year ago right some of those farms are owned by Saudi Arabia and are shipping it out.