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US: Water shortages challenge how dairy farmers will feed their cows in the future

Frozen Bone-In Beef
Cow Milk
Dairy
Meat
United States
Published Mar 15, 2023

Original content

The US is heating up and that could spell disaster for US livestock producers. According to the website Climate.gov, given the enormous size and heat capacity of the global oceans, it takes an enormous amount of thermal energy to raise Earth's average annual surface temperature, even by a small amount. Thomas Borch of Colorado State University shared that the western US is where the temperature is rising the fastest. The US drought monitoring map documents that much of the western US is shifting from moderate to exceptional drought "And that means 145 million people are now living under these severe drought conditions," he shared at the 20th Anniversary Milk Business Conference in Las Vegas late last year. Couple that with the alarming water scarcity problems facing the western US, and alarm bells are going off, posing a legitimate question: “How are we going to feed our cows in the future?” According to Borch, over the next 80 years, not just the US, but the entire world will get ...
Source: Milkpoint
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