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Drought forces Midwest firm to ponder drier future

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“We have discussions like, ‘Are you going to shut us down or put people out of work?’ And we say ‘You need to identify [alternative] sources of water so we’re not put in this position,’” said Dave Leuthe, deputy director of the Minnesota DNR Ecological and Water Resources Division.

Homeowners and small businesses are used to being asked to conserve water during drought. But big companies are often the last to face restrictions. Factories provide jobs, and utilities generate the power that keeps the lights and machinery on. Limiting their access to water could mean cutting production and employment.

“If you’re going to start playing hardball with those businesses, they might decide this is too much trouble, we’re going to move to another location,” said Michael Doran, a professor of water and wastewater engineering at the University of Wisconsin.

In Decatur, ADM is king. The company employs 4,000 people in the town of 76,000. And it’s influential far beyond the city’s borders. ADM has 265 processing plants in 75 countries, is ranked 28th in this year’s Fortune 500 and is legendary for political influence.

Twenty-five years ago, no one at the company was very concerned about water.

But the Midwest drought of 1988 scared ADM into finding ways to reuse it. The result, in part, is a 25-acre pond full of waste water, which will be cleaned by bacteria in frothy, churning brown lagoons that sit nearby. Eventually, the water will be used again, mainly for cooling.

“It sounds real noble to say we want to conserve water,” Crookshank said. “In reality it was, ‘Don’t shut the plant down.’”

Water is now an ongoing concern. When Decatur officials started warning residents this summer that restrictions were coming, they also initiated weekly talks with ADM and another local agribusiness firm, Tate & Lyle, about the receding lake. The discussions, however, had a different tone than orders given to other businesses, such as car washes, to stop using city water.

“The discussions that we’ve had with ADM and Tate & Lyle involve, what kind of restrictions can they live with?” said Keith Alexander, the city’s director of water management. Aside from hospitals and the fire department, the companies are the most critical water users in town, he added.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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