The Price of Water 2012: 18 Percent Rise Since 2010, 7 Percent Over Last Year in 30 Major U.S. Cities
16 Comments
/
Rates have increased in many cities, but local conditions dictate by how much and how the increase is distributed. Chicago prices are up nearly 25 percent, while Los Angeles is down by 9 percent.
Film Review: Last Call at the Oasis
A documentary film on the world’s water crisis opens this weekend.
In These Dry Times, Groundwater Rescues New Mexico Farmers
Surface water allocations last year were 10 percent of normal,…
Forecasting Western U.S. Water Supply in 2012: La Niña Again Delivers a Wet North and a Dry South
As water availability data starts coming in, this year's water allocations and the potential consequences for irrigation, hydropower, wildfires, and flooding are being assessed — La Niña weather patterns have returned this year, but water supply conditions generally are not as extreme as they were 2011.
U.S. Supreme Court Navigates Waters of Ownership, Clarifies Possession of Missouri River Bottomland
Montana may have lost the bottom, but the state was awarded — and entrusted — all that floats to the top as part of a public trust authority to protect water resources.
Q&A: Subir Bhattacharjee on the Geopolitics of Oil and Alberta’s Tar Sands
Subir Bhattacharjee — a professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Alberta and one of Canada’s top water quality experts — tells Circle of Blue about the water cycle of the tar sands while he attends a high-level conference in Alberta, Canada.
Clean Energy Picture Dramatically Changed For Midwest, As U.S. Fossil Energy Boom Gathers Steam
With the price of natural gas falling thanks to innovating drilling solutions in states like Ohio and Pennsylvania, investments in water-sipping energy models like wind and solar have dried up.
Water Rights: Arizona Senators John Kyl and John McCain Meet With Navajo Nation Leaders
Decades in the making, a Navajo-Hopi water rights settlement…
Chicago’s $7 Billion Plan to Fix Crumbling Infrastructure
From expanding its largest airport to replacing century-old water…
Once A Cleanup Leader, Michigan Struggles With Leaking Fuel
The state's water is at risk from 9,100 leaking underground storage…
Satellite Perspectives: NASA’s GRACE Program Sees Groundwater From Space
A first-of-its-kind space mission shows dips in groundwater supplies…
Agriculture and Sewage Dead Zone: Taking on Nutrient Pollution in the Mississippi River Watershed
As the impact of agriculture on water quality intensifies around the globe, two lawsuits in the United States aim to reduce the size of the Gulf of Mexico's ‘dead zone’ by setting limits on nutrient pollution in the Mississippi River Basin.