BLOG
Via Daily Sabah, a report on the impact of drought on Türkiye’s Lake Sapanca as water recedes by 40 meters Lake Sapanca, the main drinking water source of Sakarya, has set off alarms in Sakarya and Kocaeli as water levels have receded to 40 meters. The lake, being one of the few lakes in Türkiye […]
Read more »Via Arizona Mirror, a report on the western U.S.’s water crisis: Water authorities in the Western U.S. don’t have a crystal ball, but rapidly receding reservoirs uncovering sunken boats and other debris lost in their depths decades ago give a clear view of the hard choices ahead. If western states do not agree on a […]
Read more »Via GroundUp, a report on two (2) key dams in South Africa that are only at a combined 15% water level: Impofu Dam at 7% and Churchill Dam may run dry by April Last week, the combined dam levels in the Nelson Mandela Bay region dropped to an alarming 15%, of which only 9% is […]
Read more »Via High Country News, a report on the number of groundwater aquifers the United States and Mexico officially share along their border. A lack of consensus over what qualifies as an aquifer has made regulating these transboundary waters nearly impossible: The U.S. and Mexico share underground water basins that span more than 121,500 square miles of […]
Read more »Via Seed Daily, a report on the agricultural future of water scarce Central Asia: A severe agriculture drought swept Central Asia in 2021 in its early growing season, causing mass die-offs of crops and livestock and leading to increased food prices. This harsh drought is not an independent event but an intensification of a drying […]
Read more »Courtesy of the New York Times, an article on how hundreds of homes outside the boundaries of Scottsdale can no longer get water from the city, and their owners are now living a worst-case scenario of drought in the West: Joe McCue thought he had found a desert paradise when he bought one of the […]
Read more »