The Indira Ghandi Canal, constructed in the late 1950s and early 1960s, draws water from Punjab, in northwest India, and transports it hundreds of kilometers south to Rajasthan, where it serves as the state’s primary source of water for irrigation. Solar and wind energy development use virtually no water, a virtue in the hot and dry region.

The Indira Ghandi Canal, constructed in the late 1950s and early 1960s, draws water from Punjab, in northwest India, and transports it hundreds of kilometers south to Rajasthan, where it serves as the state’s primary source of water for irrigation. Solar and wind energy development use virtually no water, a virtue in the hot and dry region.

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