COP28 Climate UAE Alfalfa Water

Gary Saiter, chairman of the board and general manager of the Wenden Domestic Water Improvement District, walks by a water tank at the district's well Tuesday, Oct. 17, 2023, in Wenden, Ariz. According to Saiter, records indicate the water table at the utility's well have dropped several hundred feet since the 1940s. He believes the state needs to implement controls to help preserve the aquifer. (AP Photo/John Locher)

WENDEN, Ariz. (AP) — A blanket of bright green alfalfa spreads across western Arizona's McMullen Valley, ringed by rolling mountains and warmed by the hot desert sun.

Matthew Hancock's family has used groundwater to grow forage crops here for more than six decades. They're long accustomed to caprices of Mother Nature that can spoil an entire alfalfa cutting with a downpour or generate an especially big yield with a string of blistering days.

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