Consuming 80 percent of
California’s developed water but accounting for only 2 percent of the
state’s GDP, agriculture thrives while everyone else is parched.
“I’ve
been smiling all the way to the bank,” said pistachio farmer John Dean
at a conference hosted this month by Paramount Farms, the mega-operation
owned by Stewart Resnick, a Beverly Hills billionaire known for his
sprawling agricultural holdings, controversial water dealings, and
millions of dollars in campaign contributions
to high-powered California politicians including Governor Jerry Brown,
former governors Arnold Schwarzenegger and Gray Davis, and U.S. Senator
Dianne Feinstein.The record drought now entering its fourth year in California has alarmed the public, left a number of rural communities without drinking water, and triggered calls for mandatory rationing. There’s no relief in sight: The winter rainy season, which was a bust again this year, officially ends on April 15. Nevertheless, some large-scale farmers are enjoying extraordinary profits despite the drought, thanks in part to infusions of what experts call dangerously under-priced water.
READ MORE:http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/03/30/how-growers-gamed-california-s-drought.html
No comments:
Post a Comment