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New water law helps conservation work for all Arizonans


New water law helps conservation work for all Arizonans
Governor Ducey recently 
signed important legislation that updates how Arizona’s longstanding “use it or lose it” water policy is applied. That’s good news for Arizonans, our economy and the environment. Under the new law, HB2056, water right holders such as ranchers and farmers can intentionally and voluntarily leave their water in a stream without fear of losing their water rights through forfeiture or abandonment. While that may sound commonsense, it’s a significant shift in how our state has approached water rights.
Kim Mitchell
This new law helps clarify longstanding and complex issues around water use in Arizona. Arizona’s forfeiture law provides that in some cases a surface water right may be forfeited after five years of non-use. There has been uncertainty about how and when this law applies, creating risks or in some cases perceived risk that a surface water user choosing to conserve wat ....

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How Does a State Use 40 Percent Less Water?


How Does a State Use 40 Percent Less Water?
A recent study found that if the Colorado River drought continues, Arizona, California, and Nevada may have to cut their water usage by nearly half. Acceptance is the first step.
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
A tall bleached “bathtub ring” can be seen on the rock around Lake Mead in 2015, where water levels have sunk lower and lower.
Arizona, California, and Nevada will need to cut their use of Colorado River water by nearly 40 percent by 2050. A study by researchers at Utah State University, which the
Arizona Daily Starreported this past Sunday, noted that Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming the Upper Basin states will have to reduce their usage, as well, though not by as much as those pulling water from the Lower Basin. ....

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