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"path": "/2026/06/15/climate/colorado-river-drought-states.html",
"publishedAt": "2026-06-15T15:17:07.000Z",
"site": "https://www.nytimes.com",
"tags": [
"Water",
"Federal-State Relations (US)",
"Drought",
"Rivers",
"United States Politics and Government",
"States (US)",
"Reservoirs",
"Conservation of Resources",
"Agriculture and Farming",
"Global Warming",
"Bureau of Reclamation",
"Interior Department",
"Biden, Joseph R Jr",
"Trump, Donald J",
"Arizona",
"California",
"Colorado",
"Colorado River",
"Lake Mead",
"Lake Powell (Utah-Ariz)",
"Mexico",
"Nevada",
"New Mexico",
"Utah",
"Wyoming"
],
"textContent": "A prolonged drought means the nation’s largest reservoirs are dwindling, and litigation over access to water could lie ahead.",
"title": "Tensions Are Rising Between States That Rely on the Colorado River"
}