'It would likely dry up.' Rare desert spring imperiled by company's plan to pump groundwater, researchers say (Desert Sun)

Desert SunApril 14th, 2018 4:28 PM

Below the rocky, sunbaked ridges of the Clipper Mountains in the Mojave Desert, a ribbon of green teems with life. Cottonwoods, willows and reeds sway with the breeze. Crickets chirp. Bees buzz around shallow pools. Clear water gushes from a hole in the ground, forming Bonanza Spring, the largest spring in the southeastern Mojave Desert. This rare oasis is at the center of the fight over a company’s plan to pump groundwater and sell it to California cities. Cadiz Inc. is proposing to pump an average of 16.3 billion gallons of water each year for 50 years. The company says the project won’t harm any of the springs in the area, and it recently presented a study in which researchers concluded Bonanza Spring wouldn’t be affected by its groundwater pumping...

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Bonanza Springs new ground zero in battle over Cadiz water (Hi-Desert Star)

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Study Claims Cadiz Water Project Threatens Natural Spring In Mojave Trails National Monument (KCDZ)