Stuff I Wrote Elsewhere: A Feud Over Lower Rio Grande Water Distribution

From the morning paper, a look at the way this year’s drought has laid bare a Byzantine argument over how to properly divide up the waters of the Lower Rio Grande between Texas and New Mexico farmers (sub/ad req.): Water flows down the Rio Grande in southern New Mexico today, past parched farmers who cannot …

Continue reading ‘Stuff I Wrote Elsewhere: A Feud Over Lower Rio Grande Water Distribution’ »

Why Some NM Schlub Cares About the Sacramento Delta

I’ve triggered some puzzlement among California water folks as I call around trying to understand the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta in preparation for my trip out there next month. Why does a New Mexican care? Other than the fact that it’s fascinating, of course. I mean what water wonk wouldn’t be fascinated by California’s water problems. …

Continue reading ‘Why Some NM Schlub Cares About the Sacramento Delta’ »

Stuff I Wrote Elsewhere: Lessons from a Drought

From the morning paper, a wander in the bosque to look for signs of drought (sub/ad req.): There is a resilience, it turns out, to these desert ecosystems. They’re used to this happening every so often, and they know what to do in response. Some leaf out less, or leaf out later. Some depend on …

Continue reading ‘Stuff I Wrote Elsewhere: Lessons from a Drought’ »

Stuff I Wrote Elsewhere: Rafting on Drinking Water

How dry is it this year in New Mexico? So dry that rafters on the Rio Chama will have to use spare drinking water, pumped through the system weekends this spring and summer, for their fun. From Friday’s ABQJournal (sub/ad req, I think): Albuquerque has to move its water supplies down the Rio Chama sometime, …

Continue reading ‘Stuff I Wrote Elsewhere: Rafting on Drinking Water’ »

River Beat: The Myth of a Busted La Niña Forecast

There’s a myth that has firmly taken hold of a busted La Niña forecast on the Colorado River this year. It shows up this morning in a Las Vegas Review-Journal editorial. No. This issue came up last September, as we were heading into the La Niña season. It was a common misapprehension back then, and …

Continue reading ‘River Beat: The Myth of a Busted La Niña Forecast’ »

River beat: what a difference a month makes

The latest USBR monthly Colorado River is out, and just wow. From Shaun McKinnon: In its latest 24-month report, the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation added almost 1 million acre-feet to the estimated amount of water that will be released from Lake Powell downstream into Mead, the wetter forecast possible because of near-record snowpack on the …

Continue reading ‘River beat: what a difference a month makes’ »