Environmental and community groups have sued Utah officials over failures to save its iconic Great Salt Lake from irreversible collapse.
The largest saltwater lake in the western hemisphere has
been steadily shrinking, as more and more water has been diverted away from the
lake to irrigate farmland, feed industry and water lawns. A megadrought across the US south-west, accelerated by global
heating, has hastened the lake’s demise.
Unless dire action
is taken, the lake could decline beyond recognition within five years, a report published early this year warned,
exposing a dusty lakebed laced with arsenic, mercury, lead and other toxic
substances. The resulting toxic
dustbowl would be “one of the worst environmental disasters in modern US
history”, the ecologist Ben Abbott of Brigham Young University told the
Guardian earlier this year.
Despite such
warnings, officials have failed to take serious action, local groups said in
their lawsuit, which was filed on Wednesday. “We are trying to avert disaster.
We are trying to force the hand of state government to take serious action,”
said Brian Moench of the Utah Physicians for a Healthy Environment, one of the
groups suing state agencies.
“Plaintiffs
pray that this Court declare that the State of Utah has breached its trust duty
to ensure water flows into the Great Salt Lake sufficient to maintain the
Lake,” reads the lawsuit, which was brought by coalition that includes
Earthjustice, the Utah Rivers Council, the Center for Biological Diversity and
the Sierra Club, among others.
Despite growing political
momentum on the issue, scientists say the proposed measures are not nearly
enough to save the lake, which has lost about 40bn gallons of water annually
since 2020.
The state’s
Republican governor, Spencer Cox, has suspended new claims to water in the
Great Salt Lake basin and appointed a commissioner to oversee response to the lake
crisis. Last year, Utah’s legislature passed several conservation measures, including a $40m trust to support lake
preservation projects.
But Abbott and his
colleagues, who authored a sobering report on the lake in January, found that
those measures increased flows to the lake by just 100,000 acre feet in 2022.
About 2.5m acre-feet a year of water will need to flow into the lake to bring it
to a healthy level, the researchers estimated.
That water will
likely have to come at the expense of agriculture, which takes in about
three-quarters of the water diverted away from the lake to grow mostly alfalfa
and hay. Cities and mineral extraction operations each take up another 9% of
diverted water.
But wresting water
away from agriculture is politically complicated. Officials have explored
propositions to pay farmers to fallow land and use less water, though such
proposals have yet to gain much tractions.
Lawmakers have also offered up a series of out-of-the-box solutions – including cloud seeding, which uses chemicals to prompt more precipitation – or building a giant pipeline from the Pacific Ocean.
-Maanvi Singh, The Guardian
My Photograph of the Lake in 1974
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