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Water, Drought, and the Future of Irrigation
“When water dries up, what grows?”
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SUMMARY - Water, Drought, and the Future of Irrigation

Water makes agriculture possible. In arid and semi-arid regions, irrigation transforms productive potential. Even in wetter regions, supplemental irrigation buffers drought periods. But water resources face intensifying pressure—from climate change, competing uses, and overextraction. How agriculture manages water in coming decades will shape which regions can continue farming, which must transform, and which may become unviable.

Alberta
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CONSTITUTIONAL BRIEFING - Water Drought And The Future Of Irrigation

Constitutional Overview

Climate_Change_And_Environmental_Sustainability > Agriculture_And_Food_Systems > Water_Drought_And_The_Future_Of_Irrigation

Constitutional Depth Assessment (CDA) Score: 34%

Constitutional Vulnerability Score: 9%

Doctrines Engaged: 7

Top Dimensions:

Alberta
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RIPPLE

This thread documents how changes to Water, Drought, and the Future of Irrigation may affect other areas of Canadian civic life. Share your knowledge: What happens downstream when this topic changes? What industries, communities, services, or systems feel the impact? Guidelines: - Describe indirect or non-obvious connections - Explain the causal chain (A leads to B because...) - Real-world examples strengthen your contribution Comments are ranked by community votes. Well-supported causal relationships inform our simulation and planning tools.
Alberta
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