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Archive for September, 2025

Experts: Slash Colorado River Consumption ASAP To Avoid Crisis

The deadline is rapidly approaching for the Colorado River Basin states to come up with a plan for divvying up the river’s waters and operating its reservoirs and other plumbing infrastructure after 2026. But a recent report warns that even if the states do make the November deadline — and it’s looking more and more […]

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Afghanistan’s Qosh Tepa Canal and the Paradox of Central Asian Water Politics

Via The Diplomat, a report on Afghanistan’s Qosh Tepa Canal which – for Afghanistan – is a symbol of sovereignty and hope. For its neighbors, it is a looming ecological and economic crisis. As climate change accelerates and water resources in Central Asia continue to shrink, the construction of the massive Qosh Tepa Canal in […]

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Egypt Girds Itself for the GERD

Via Foreign Policy, a look at how Egypt is responding to its lost of majority control of the Nile River: Ethiopia opened Africa’s largest hydroelectric dam on Tuesday, ending Egypt’s majority control of the Nile River. The controversial $5 billion Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), which took 14 years to build, aims to double Ethiopia’s power generation […]

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Is Southern California Prepared to Avoid a ‘Day Zero’ Water Crisis?

Via the Los Angeles Times, a look at whether Southern California is prepared to avoid a ‘Day Zero’ water crisis? Over the last century, Southern California has grown and thrived by accessing water from faraway sources including the Colorado River, the Eastern Sierra’s streams and the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta. Massive aqueducts transport water through […]

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The Rio Grande’s Pecan Problem

Via High Country News, commentary on how Big Ag is threatening New Mexico’s water supply:   Green is not the color one expects to see in the cactus-and-yucca-dotted Chihuahuan Desert of southern New Mexico. But for more than a hundred miles along the I-25 corridor, between Truth or Consequences and the Texas border, a rich vein […]

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When Rivers Become Red Lines

Via Geopolitical Futures, a look at how scale and urgency have heightened the importance of certain water resources: Societies have tried to control resources as long as there have been resources to control. Whether precious metals, arable lands or hydrocarbon deposits, access to resources shapes military postures, influences political alliances and sets foreign policies – […]

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