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Show Chevron needs Wyoming Legislature's OK to export water The state attorney general ruled in Cheyenne, Wyo. last week that Chevron Chemical Co. would have to get the Wyoming Legislature's permission to use Wyoming water in a project to move phosphate, from Utah to Wyoming. Chevron is thinking about building a phosphate fertilizer plant at Rock Springs, Wyo., but the mine that would supply phosphate is in Utah. Chevron has proposed two plans involving Wyoming water for a slurry pipeline to get the phosphate from the Utah mine to Rock Springs. Under Chevron's initial plan, the company would buy 2,200 a crew -Wyoming water a year and u f.1 down the Green River to unTni users in Utah. In return anl amount of underground water fa, would be used in the slurry 1m from the mine to Rock Springs Under an alternate plan rw would buy the Wyoming waiTf? now down the Green River ir send it by a pipeline to the mi thenue.t in theslurry pipei Under both plans, the water userf the slurry pipeline would be usediT. Rock Springs plant. "mthe Regular television news was first transmitted daily for 15 minutes a day, on July 1st, 1941 |