After a warm, dry winter, Albertans are preparing for what could be a devastatingly dry summer. Snowpack is low, reservoirs around the province are well below seasonal levels, and farmers are already anticipating a difficult growing season.
But this isn't a one-off. Experts say the multi-year drying trend is likely to continue, which will have major implications for water use in the province — the biggest of which is agriculture. Is the future of the province's biggest industry at risk? CBC Calgary's Joel Dryden explains what a deepening drought could mean for life in Alberta in the decades ahead.
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The emotional fallout of Buffy Sainte-Marie revelations
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Buffy Sainte-Marie’s Indigenous ancestry challenged
What happens when the QAnon ‘Queen’ comes to town?
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The Rent Trap
Aid trickles into Gaza, as Israel ramps up airstrikes
The true story behind ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’
Hamas hostages’ uncertain future
The 'algorithmic fog of war' with Israel and Hamas
After 5 years of legal weed, what's changed?
Israel prepares to invade Gaza
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Voices from Gaza under ‘complete siege’
What is Hamas?
Hamas attacks, Israel declares war
Front Burner Introduces: Someone Knows Something | Season 8
Canadian CIA MK-Ultra victims still fight for justice
Bonus: Brainwashed
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