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The Intelligence from The Economist

Stymie a river: the American West dries up

The Intelligence from The Economist

The Economist

News, Global News, Daily News

4.53.7K Ratings

🗓️ 18 August 2021

⏱️ ? minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The first-ever water shortage declared for the Colorado River is just one sign of troubles to come; as the climate changes, century-old water habits and policies must change with it. Israel’s Pegasus spyware has raised concerns the world over, but the country is loath to curb its exports of hacking tools. And the resurgence of a beloved and funky Nigerian seasoning.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello and welcome to the Intelligence from the Economist. I'm your host, Jason Palmer.

0:09.2

Every weekday we provide fresh perspective on the events shaping your world.

0:17.3

Cybersecurity experts may have been shocked to find that the snooping software called Pegasus

0:22.6

was being used by governments around the world, but they wouldn't have been surprised

0:27.1

by its origins. Israel has quite a tidy business in hacking tools.

0:33.4

And a traditional Nigerian seasoning called Eru was, for a while, displaced by the mass

0:39.0

market stock cubes of foreign firms. But die hard fans of its funky taste are making

0:44.8

sure it can still be found, at home and increasingly abroad.

0:56.0

Just up though.

1:00.9

This week for the first time ever, America's federal government formally declared a water shortage

1:06.2

in the Colorado River, 40 million Americans in seven states depend on the massive waterway.

1:13.2

The region's farmers will now face drastic cuts. For more than 20 years, one long drought

1:19.8

has relentlessly dried out the region, but drought might not be the right word. It suggests

1:25.6

something temporary. John Ensminger, the boss of southern Nevada's water authority, says

1:30.8

these conditions are here to stay.

1:33.2

We must adapt to the new reality of a warmer, drier future, where today's Colorado River

1:39.0

hydrology is not the same hydrology this base in New a century ago.

1:45.7

The West's famed Joshua trees are already parched and dying, making sure that whole ecosystems

1:51.7

and citizens don't go the same way will take more than just blunt restrictions on usage.

1:57.8

Century old habits and policies will have to change.

2:01.4

If you travel to Lake Mead, which is very close by to Las Vegas, and the biggest reservoir

2:07.2

in America, it straddles the Colorado River, you see this white, weird-looking strip around

...

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