Great Lakes key front in water wars
Western, Southern states covet Midwest resource
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While the West burns and the Southeast bakes, there is little to
suggest a large-scale, climatological catastrophe playing out any time
soon in the Midwest. In fact, farmers in Iowa and Minnesota had trouble
last week harvesting their corn and soybean crops because there had
been too much rain.
But potentially huge battles over water are
looming in the Great Lakes region as cities, towns and states near and
far fight for access to the world's largest body of fresh surface
water, all of it residing in the five Great Lakes.
Call them water wars, with the Great Lakes states hunkering down to protect what they see as theirs.
New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, a Democratic candidate for president,
gave voice to his water lust early this month by suggesting that water
from the Great Lakes could be piped to the rapidly growing -- and
increasingly dry -- Southwestern states.
"States like Wisconsin are awash in water," Richardson told the Las Vegas Sun.
Richardson soon backed off after swift protests from the Midwest,
including a resounding "No" from Michigan's Democratic Gov. Jennifer
Granholm.
That won't be the end of it. The fires in Southern
California, the prolonged drought in the Southeast and the shrinking
flow of the Colorado River, which feeds seven Western states, have
underscored the importance of water supplies in rapidly developing
regions and the determination of a handful of states to hold on to a
resource they see as key to their economic future.
With fresh
water supplies dwindling in the West and South, the Great Lakes are the
natural-resource equivalent of the fat pension fund, and some
politicians are eager to raid it. The lakes contain nearly 20 percent
of the world's surface fresh water.
"You're going to see
increasing pressure to gain access to this [water] supply," said Aaron
Packman, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at
Northwestern University. "Clearly it's a case of different regional
interests competing for this water."
Eight Great Lakes-area
states, from Minnesota to New York, and two Canadian provinces have
proposed a regional water compact that would, among other things,
strengthen an existing ban on major water diversions outside the Great
Lakes Basin, home to 40 million Americans and Canadians. That proposal
still has to work its way through several legislatures, and then it
must go to Congress, where the political balance of power has been
tilting west and south for decades.
Coveting Great Lakes water
is not a recent development. In the past two decades, governors have
effectively resisted attempts to divert water outside the Great Lakes
Basin. For instance, they joined forces with Canada in 1988 to block an
effort by then-Illinois Gov. James Thompson to tap into the Great Lakes
to help free up drought-stalled barge traffic in the Mississippi River.
Those are the loud fights, conjuring images of enormously expensive
pipelines delivering billions of gallons of water daily to distant,
parched lands.
But there also are smaller but no less
significant frictions among the states trying to protect the water,
notably in the Milwaukee suburb of Waukesha, which wants to pipe Lake
Michigan water into its community because its drinking water wells show
high levels of cancer-causing radium. The Waukesha conflict stems from
the city's being outside the vast Great Lakes Basin, which means the
Lake Michigan water it would use would not be returned to the lake; it
would be lost, draining into the Fox River and ultimately down the
Mississippi and into the Gulf of Mexico.
Waukesha is a small
but important example of the potential precedent-setting nature of
diverting water to a city or state outside the Great Lakes Basin.
"There's a concern that the thirsty in the Great Lakes region will set
the precedent locally, even though they may be 5 or 10 miles outside
the basin. But 20, 30 or 50 years from now, that precedent could be
used to send water to far-flung reaches of the continent," said Peter
Annin, author of "The Great Lakes Water Wars."
"If you make the exception at 15 miles, what about 30 or 50 or 500 miles? That's the fear," Annin said.
Chicago River precedent
Of course, a glaring precedent was set a century ago when Chicago
reversed the flow of the Chicago River. The Supreme Court repeatedly
upheld the legality of the Chicago diversion and, in 1967, opened the
door to Chicago suburbs to receive Lake Michigan water, even though
those communities are outside the Great Lakes Basin.
But in an age of water wars, Waukesha may be the most visible line drawn in the sand.
Water levels of the Great Lakes are down substantially, and while that
may be part of the historic cycle of ups and downs, water managers
argue the region must jealously guard what is here. At the same time,
more communities are discovering contamination of their drinking-water
supplies, which already has increased the pressure to obtain Great
Lakes water. A recent report forecast water shortages in northeast
Illinois by 2020.
Copyright © 2007, Chicago Tribune
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