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By Garance Burke, AP, January 23, 2008
In a state where water has become an increasingly scarce commodity,
a growing number of farmers are betting they can make more money
selling their water supplies to thirsty cities and farms to the south
than by growing crops.
The shortages this season among the
most intense of the last decade are already shooting water prices
skyward in many areas, and Los Angeles-area cities are begging for
water and coaxing farmers to let their fields go to dust.
"It
just makes dollars and sense right now," said Bruce Rolen, a
third-generation farmer in Northern California's lush Sacramento
Valley. "There's more economic advantage to fallowing than raising a
crop."
Instead of sowing seeds in April, Rolen plans to
leave his rice stubble for the birds and sell his irrigation water on
the open market, where it could fetch up to three times the normal
price.
http://www.pe.com/ap_news/California/CA_Water_Wars_324821C.shtml
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