Will the Last 31% of Oglala Water Be Used for AI?
by Admin ·
The States Draining Their Last Water Reserves Right Now
Jun 9, 2026
A foreign company, banned from growing a water-intensive crop in its own arid country, moved its operation to the Arizona desert. For years, it legally pumped billions of gallons of groundwater for free, effectively loading America’s ancient water reserves onto cargo ships and sending them to the Middle East. This isn’t a hypothetical scenario; it’s the story of Fondomonte, a subsidiary of Saudi dairy giant Almarai, and it’s just one symptom of a much larger, invisible crisis unfolding beneath our feet. In this documentary, we investigate the two colliding water crises threatening the American West. First, the visible collapse of the Colorado River system, where Lake Powell is now just 38 feet away from “minimum power pool”—the point where Glen Canyon Dam’s hydroelectric turbines will shut down, triggering a massive power crisis. Downstream, Lake Mead has fallen below a critical 1,050-foot threshold, pushing Arizona and California toward devastating cuts. But this is the story you already know. The real story, the one the headlines do not capture, is happening underground. We expose the quiet, systematic draining of the nation’s largest aquifer, the Ogallala, which underpins America’s food security. Recent NASA satellite data proves it is at its lowest point in recorded history. We then travel to California’s Central Valley, where decades of over-pumping have caused the ground itself to sink, wiping out billions in property values and permanently destroying the earth’s ability to store water. As one expert put it, “The land is sinking, and so are the property values.” Finally, we reveal the ultimate irony: Las Vegas, the city of excess, is secretly the one place best prepared to survive the apocalypse. Learn about the city’s half-billion-dollar “third straw”—an engineering marvel that allows it to pump water from below Lake Mead’s dead pool line, securing its future while its neighbors face a dry reckoning. From Saudi water grabs and sinking cities to the coming conflict between AI and agriculture, this is the story of a nation draining its last reserves, right now.
