Climate change in the West: it’s not just about more or less rain

Ben Cook at NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies has a new paper that offers a reminder of why the impact of climate change on our ecosystems and water supplies involves more than “will it rain less”? In some sense this is an old and obvious point, which I link here just to repeat said …

Continue reading ‘Climate change in the West: it’s not just about more or less rain’ »

Drought means we should do that thing I already knew we should do

Mark Lubell at U.C. Davis has a fascinating post about the history and politics of drought: [N]early every scientist, commentator, and politician is using drought to make some call for their preferred political change. Regulate groundwater. More storage. Build the twin tunnels. Pass the long-delayed water bond. So given that we’ve been here before (click …

Continue reading ‘Drought means we should do that thing I already knew we should do’ »

On drought and spreading risk

The anthropologist William Abruzzi wrote a fascinating essay some years ago explaining the success of early Mormon agriculture in the Little Colorado River Basin, one of the more bad-assed desert environments in which one might want to do one’s 19th century, pre-federal-irrigation-subsidy farming. Holbrook, which spans the Little Colorado, averages a bit more than 8 …

Continue reading ‘On drought and spreading risk’ »

California’s water policy failings on display, but is there a lesson of success here as well?

tl;dr While Northern California flounders, Southern California’s drought planning kicks in as Met taps into its Lake Mead water savings bank Brett Walton, writing about President Obama’s visit to California’s drought-stricken Central Valley, captured that state’s water policy dilemma: “It can’t just be a matter of there’s going to be less and less water so …

Continue reading ‘California’s water policy failings on display, but is there a lesson of success here as well?’ »

“If something cannot go on forever, it will stop.”

From Brett Walton, a visit to California’s Central Valley to witness Stein’s Law in action: David Zoldoske, who has worked at Fresno State for 31 years, sees this as the future of agriculture in the Central Valley. Fewer acres will be irrigated, less groundwater will be pumped. Walton’s entire piece is worth reading. Wikipedia has …

Continue reading ‘“If something cannot go on forever, it will stop.”’ »

Nunes: “There was plenty of water.”

California Congressman Devin Nunes, in this morning’s New York Times: “Global warming is nonsense,” Mr. Nunes said. He criticized the federal government for shutting off portions of California’s system of water irrigation and storage, and diverting water into a program for freshwater salmon. “There was plenty of water. This has nothing to do with drought. …

Continue reading ‘Nunes: “There was plenty of water.”’ »

Losing the groundwater pumping race to the bottom: your choice

As we watch Californians floundering over drought, or sometimes not floundering, it’s worth revisiting Elinor Ostrom’s Governing the Commons. In it, Ostrom tells the story of communities in the San Gabriel Valley, east of Los Angeles, coming together to manage their groundwater at a time when a race to the bottom was underway that, absent …

Continue reading ‘Losing the groundwater pumping race to the bottom: your choice’ »

Lady Gaga, California drought

Here at Inkstain, we’ve long believed that our drought and water coverage has suffered from a lack of Lady Gaga-related items. Today, thanks to the LA Times, we can correct this shortcoming. The story, fittingly enough, involves Hearst Castle and what is apparently a leaking swimming pool: [P]ark officials and the singer came up with …

Continue reading ‘Lady Gaga, California drought’ »

It’s not like California hasn’t had the time to get in front of this problem

California is entering its fourth drought in as many decades. Yet even now, some communities lack water meters to track how much water people are using and to charge them accordingly. Many of those households don’t even receive monthly water bills. They pay for water through yearly assessments attached to their property taxes, which may …

Continue reading ‘It’s not like California hasn’t had the time to get in front of this problem’ »