News, Articles and Interviews

News briefs and articles about water footprints, water use and availability, as well as interviews with key people in the fields of water footprints and water use.

Update: The Decline of Western Snowpack is Real

January 21, 2019

The federal government runs more than 700 telemetry stations in high-mountain watersheds in 13 Western states. The stations deliver vital data about water supply, which is fed into climate models. Using the data, the models have predicted a decline in Western snowpack and earlier spring melting, which would not only put water supplies at risk […]

Glaciers Are Retreating. Millions Rely on Their Water

January 18, 2019

Henry Fountain and Ben C. Solomon of the New York Times went to Kazakhstan to document the effects of climate change on Tuyuksu glacier. There are approximately 150,000 glaciers that cover about 200,000 square miles of the earth’s surface. Over the last 40 years, they’ve lost the equivalent of a layer of ice 70 feet thick. Some, in […]

2019 Will Be a Big Year for Water

January 17, 2019

Here’s another look ahead at 2019 as told by Water Lover Extraordinaire Tara Lohan. As we’ve discussed before, changes to how the country regulates certain waterways will be a big topic of discussion in 2019 (see the note below about the only public hearing taking place on the changes). Colorado River water allocations are being […]

Waterkeeper: We Can’t Afford to Lose the Clean Water Act

January 8, 2019

The Trump administration plans to roll back safeguards on many US streams, wetlands and water bodies. This assault on clean water comes in the form of a proposal to narrow the definition of “waters of the United States” (WOTUS), thus removing numerous waters from protection under the Clean Water Act. Documents FOIAed by E&E News […]

Droughts in the American West Hinder Fight Against Climate Change.

January 4, 2019

As droughts hit the American West over the last several years, people often think about parched crops, lower water levels and even a kindling-dry landscape suitable wildfires. One thing that is often overlooked are the impacts droughts have on hydroelectric power plants and their hindrance on greenhouse gas reductions. A recent Stanford University study finds […]

Circle of Blue: Looking Back at 2018 and Ahead to 2019

January 3, 2019

Happy New Year! Just because the calendar has flipped to 2019 doesn’t mean that US water concerns of 2018 have evaporated. Circle of Blue convened an expert panel for its Speaking of Water podcast to discuss the ongoing challenges and possible solutions that trail into the new year. From the Colorado River basin states work […]

Circle of Blue: US Water, 2018 Year-In-Review

December 21, 2018

As usual, the United States experienced plenty of water issues and concerns in 2018, and the intrepid reporter, Brett Walton from water news organization, Circle of Blue has it covered. For regulators, politicians and other public officials, environmental challenges were apparent, and many of them had to do with water. See below for a snapshot […]

New Estimate Finds Less Fresh Groundwater in US Than Previously Assumed

December 19, 2018

Grant Ferguson and colleagues from the University of Arizona and the University of California, Santa Barbara published a new study in Environmental Research Letters, looking at the depth at which fresh groundwater encounters saltier reserves that are less useful for drinking or irrigation. They demonstrated that fresh groundwater is shallower throughout the country than previously […]