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Via Aeon, an interesting look at what – as storms, droughts and floods become more intense – the world can learn from Japan’s profoundly wet history? In early June 2018, I landed at Kansai airport in Japan, with a full day of travel ahead. A few hours later, I was sitting on a Shinkansen – […]
Read more »Via the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, a timeline of 4,000 years of conflict over water: On June 6, 2023, bombs hit and destroyed the Kakhovka Dam in southern Ukraine and eliminated its hydropower generation, draining the massive reservoir behind the dam and flooding four cities and several dozen villages downstream (Gleick et al. 2023). The […]
Read more »Via AZ Central, commentary on the Colorado River – which is in better shape now than it has been in years, thanks to extra water in Lake Mead and federal government funding – but the question is how to keep it there after 2026? We have a good story to tell about the Colorado River […]
Read more »Via Forbes, an article on global water crises: Benjamin Franklin once remarked, “When the well is dry, we know the worth of water.” Franklin’s quote serves as a sobering reminder of the importance of water, especially as the world faces an unprecedented crisis of scarcity. Water is essential for life, yet millions around the globe […]
Read more »Courtesy of the New York Times, a report on the U.S.’s largest dam removal project which is nearly complete after a lengthy campaign by Native tribes to restore the river at the California-Oregon border: The Klamath River was once so flush with fish that local tribes ate salmon at every meal: flame-roasted filets on redwood […]
Read more »Via Eurasia Review, a look at water security in rural Morocco: In the face of growing water scarcity, Morocco has taken significant strides to secure its water resources and ensure access to clean drinking water for all its citizens. The construction of mobile seawater desalination plants and the deployment of tanker trucks to supply drinking […]
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