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Hawaii is “on the verge of catastrophe,” locals say, as water crisis continues [Video]

Trouble in the Water: Hawaii’s Climate Crisis

Trouble in the Water: Hawaii’s Climate Crisis 25:35

In Hawaii, one of the most important sayings is ola i ka wai, “water is life” — a phrase that not only sums up what it means to exist on an island, but what it means to live, period. But now, one of the largest of the island chain’s land masses is facing a triple threat to its sole freshwater source, and if it isn’t addressed soon, one community member says, “we’re in deep trouble.”

Despite being surrounded by seemingly endless ocean, freshwater on Oahu, the third-largest of Hawaii’s six major islands, is not easily accessible. The island relies on an underground aquifer for its water supply. Replenishing that aquifer is a decades-long natural process, as it takes a single drop of water roughly 25 years to make it there from the sky. 

A freshwater spring-fed well provides water to Anthony Deluze’s farm on the Hawaiian island of Oahu, …

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