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Commodities

Water Resources Dry Up, Opportunities Arise

By , Money Morning

In a recent conversation about resources I had with Rick Rule, founder of Sprott Global Resource Investments, our talk kept coming back to water.

Let's just say, Rick likes water. Or rather, the prospects for water investments.

Rick's offices are in California, so he knows only too well the supply problems plaguing southwestern U.S. states.

To put things bluntly, water is necessary, in short supply, and getting more expensive.

Water, Water Everywhere...

Few people think of water as a limited resource, much less as an investment prospect.

Sure, it covers two-thirds of planet E arth, but 97% is salt water. That makes it unfit for human consumption without a lot of expensive processing. It's also of no use for livestock consumption, nor for growing crops or industrial uses.

Just 3% is fresh water, and two-thirds of that is frozen in glaciers and in the polar icecaps. Which doesn't leave a whole lot to share.

What's more, according to the U.N., in the past hundred years, humans have increased water use at more than double the rate of population growth.

Americans use a lot of water, to the tune of 100 - 150 gallons per person daily, on average. On the other side of the planet, in places like China and India, water use is closer to 20 gallons per day. But with nearly a third of the world population living in these two countries alone, their "water footprint" is still massive.

What's more, as numerous developing nations improve their incomes and graduate to the ranks of the middle class, their water consumption just keeps accelerating.

American Thirst

Although fresh water i s relatively abundant in North America, the resource certainly isn't spread out evenly. Areas along the U.S. west coast have tremendous climates to grow produce, but often lack sufficient water.

Twenty-seven million people in seven states depend on the Colorado River as their main source of water. The Colorado irrigates over 3 million acres of farmland. In Southern California alone, some 18 million residents look to this one river for 40% of their water needs.

But in the past decade, the Colorado has suffered a severe drought, draining it to a mere 59% of its reservoir capacity.

Three Water Positions

So needless to say, the fundamentals for solid water-related companies are very bullish, and that has Rick excited about the best of the best. But the angle he likes is not water processing, or water distribution, but rather water rights.

Remember, water is not only a precious commodity, but one that's also a basic necessity to individuals, farming, and industry.

And these three water positions are attractive ways to play the favorable supply/demand dynamic of water and water rights, especially in the southwestern U.S.

As our population ages and gravitates to warmer climes, this is one sector that's likely to get a lot more attention in the not- too- distant future.

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