Arizona’s Water Hunt

Arizona’s on the hunt for new water, and it won’t be cheap. Tony Davis covered this week’s meeting of the folks working on the program with one of my all time favorite government acronyms – Project ADD Water (that’s Acquisition, Development and Delivery). It’s the planning effort among Central Arizona Project players to find new …

Continue reading ‘Arizona’s Water Hunt’ »

Stuff I Wrote Elsewhere: My Visit to Lake Mead

You folks have already seen most of this, but for readers of what we call “the print product”, I pulled together today some of my thoughts about the draining of Lake Mead and its implications for New Mexico. I did this (perhaps not coincidentally) as I’ve been pulling together some thoughts to speak tonight at …

Continue reading ‘Stuff I Wrote Elsewhere: My Visit to Lake Mead’ »

Powell and Watershed Boundaries

A friend recently described a New Mexico water rights battle currently underway as a “water lawyers stimulus act.” I was reminded of that reading Frank Jacobs at Strange Maps describing John Wesley Powell’s thinking regarding the division of the West’s water: Powell’s warning at an irrigation congress in 1883 seems particularly prescient: “Gentlemen, you are …

Continue reading ‘Powell and Watershed Boundaries’ »

On the Difficulty of Fixing Water Problems

There have been a series of helpful exchanges, in the comments here as well as elsewhere on the web, between economist David Zetland and Francis, a veteran of California’s water policy world. Zetland is a bright and articulate advocate for the use of market mechanisms to solve the thorny problem of water distribution under conditions …

Continue reading ‘On the Difficulty of Fixing Water Problems’ »

The Importance of Rivers

One of my Twitter friends (I wish I could remember who to share credit) pointed out how much this photo, taken last month by an unnamed member of the International Space Station crew, tells us about rivers and human society: