Finance

CME’s First Water Futures Are Coming as U.S. West Burns

  • CME Group plans to launch new contract by late this year
  • ‘Water scarcity is certainly one of the biggest challenges’
Firefighter monitor a controlled burn while fighting the Dolan Fire near Jolon, California on Sept. 16.Photographer: Nic Coury/Bloomberg
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If the record heat and wildfires ravaging California weren’t a clear enough sign that the climate is changing, then consider this: Wall Street is about to start trading futures contracts on the state’s water supply.

The contracts are the first of their kind in the U.S. and are being createdBloomberg Terminal by CME Group Inc., the world’s largest futures exchange. They are intended, CME says, to both allow California’s big water consumers -- like almond farms and municipalities -- to hedge against surging prices and can act as a benchmark that signals how acute water scarcity is becoming in the state and, more broadly, across the globe.