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Hot or thirsty?

It could be another long, dry summer in the American West

Photo: National Park Service

Drink or sweat. Pick one:

Page, Arizona (CNN) Lake Powell, the country’s second-largest reservoir, is drying up.

The situation is critical: if water levels at the lake were to drop another 32 feet, all hydroelectricity production would be halted at the reservoir’s Glen Canyon Dam.

The West’s climate change-induced water crisis is now triggering a potential energy crisis for millions of people in the Southwest who rely on the dam as a power source. Over the past several years, the Glen Canyon Dam has lost about 16 percent of its capacity to generate power. The water levels at Lake Powell have dropped around 100 feet in the last three years.

Climate change is now

Very, very soon, people are going to feel the heat on climate change. Literally.

Bryan Hill runs the public power utility in Page, Arizona, where the federal dam is located, and likens the situation to judgment day.

“We’re knocking on the door of judgment day — judgment day being when we don’t have any water to give anybody.”

Forty percent of Page’s power comes from the Glen Canyon Dam. Without it, they’ll be forced to make up that electricity with fossil fuels like natural gas, which emits planet-warming gases and will exacerbate the West’s water crisis.

Loss of power at the dam would also mean higher energy costs for customers as the price of fossil fuels skyrockets.

“After about A.D. 1200, something very unpleasant happens,” says University of Colorado archaeologist Stephen Lekson of what caused the Anasazi to flee the region. “The wheels come off.”

We’re next.

Photo: National Park Service

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