A blanket of bright green alfalfa spreads across western Arizona’s McMullen Valley, ringed by rolling mountains and warmed by the hot desert sun.

Matthew Hancock’s family has used groundwater to grow forage crops here for more than six decades. They’re long accustomed to caprices of Mother Nature that can spoil an entire alfalfa cutting with a downpour or generate an especially big yield with a string of blistering days.

But concerns about future water supplies from the valley’s ancient aquifers, which hold groundwater supplies, are bubbling up in Wenden, a town of around 700 people where the Hancock family farms.

Some neighbors complain their backyard wells have dried up since the Emirati agribusiness Al Dahra began farming alfalfa here on about 3,000 acres (1,214 hectares) several years ago.

  • @Sanctus
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    1810 months ago

    It doesn’t help we elected a water official whose only experience is selling water to the Saudis. Wanna guess what he instantly did the moment his power was switched on?

      • @Sanctus
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        310 months ago

        In a way, yes. That is basically the sentence when you’re selling water out of the desert like they’re hot cakes.