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A Free-Market Plan to Save the American West From Drought
A maverick investor is buying up water rights. Will he rescue a region, or just end up hurting the poor?On a brisk, cloudless day last january, Disque Deane Jr. stepped out of his SUV, kicked his cowboy boots in the dirt, and looked around. He had driven two hours from Reno on one of the loneliest stretches of interstate in the United States to visit the Diamond S Ranch, just outside the town of Winnemucca, Nevada. Before him, open fields stretched all the way to the Santa Rosa mountains, 30 miles away. But the land was barren. The fields had been chewed down to the roots by cattle, and the ranchs equipment had been stripped for parts. A steel trestle bridge lay pitched into the Humboldt River.
Surveying the dilapidated structures and the gopher-riddled soil, Deane saw something few others might: potential. The ranch and an adjoining property, totaling about 11,400 acres14 times the size of Central Parkwere for sale for $10.5 million, and he was thinking about buying them.
Deane is not a rancher or a farmer; hes a hedge-fund manager who had flown in from New York City the previous night. And as he appraised the property, he was less interested in its crop or cattle potential than in a different source of wealth: the water running through its streams and coursing beneath its surface. This tract would come with the rights to large amounts of water from the regions only major river, the Humboldt. Some of those rights were issued more than 150 years ago, which means they outrank almost all others in the state. Even if drought continues to force ranches and farms elsewhere in Nevada to cut back, the Diamond S will almost certainly get its fill.
cont'd
http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2016/03/a-plan-to-save-the-american-west-from-drought/426846/
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A Free-Market Plan to Save the American West From Drought (Original Post)
Lodestar
Mar 2016
OP
Lodestar
(2,388 posts)1. Water availability is rarely a condition of development practices in
most states. In fact developers are not held responsible for water availability
when purchasing properties and determining density. And usually their money
is invested in electing local politicians to keep it that way.
MisterP
(23,730 posts)2. or buy whole hillsides saying "you'd DIE of STARVATION
if we don't get 100% of the water in the state!"
not like their alfalfa and pistachios go overseas or anything