Posted inRange

Portland’s water managers need to grow up

Editor’s note: David Zetland, is a senior water economist at Wageningen University in the Netherlands who trained in California. We  cross-post occasional content from his blog, Aguanomics, here on the Range. “Apparently the “End of Abundance” hasn’t hit Portland yet,” says HG in the email that brought me this story: For the administrator of the […]

Posted inGoat

The pulse of the river

For a journalist, sitting through last week’s conference on the Colorado River, hosted by the Natural Resources Law Center at the University of Colorado, was a great way to take the river’s pulse — to get a sense of how the river’s water czars, academic wonks, scientists and other minders are thinking about the basin’s […]

Posted inRange

Peak and Ecological Flows in Oregon

As western states face proposals to divert and allocate the last available surface water – winter and wet season water – a debate is raging over how much of that water must be left instream to keep our rivers and their tributaries ecologically dynamic and alive. The recognition that rivers need “peak flows” is a […]

Posted inRange

Where’s the conservation?

By Heather Hansen, Red Lodge Clearing House “Navigating the Future of the Colorado River,” a conference held at the University of Colorado Law School last week, was filled with folks who have spent decades studying the river, interpreting the Law of the River (as the Compact of 1922 and many subsequent agreements are called) and […]

Posted inHeard Around the West

Dry times

ARIZONA Growth may be slow in resort towns like Aspen, but the entire state of Arizona, whose motto is “God enriches,” is burdened by more than 463,000 vacant housing units — about one vacancy for every six homes. “That’s enough housing to accommodate an entire decade’s worth of population growth — if the population were […]

Posted inRange

The past and future of Western dams

The turbines have stilled on the Elwha. Upstream from Port Angeles on Washington State’s Olympic Peninsula, we are finally seeing the material effects of a very long campaign to tear down the Elwha and Glines Canyon Dams. These aging structures, which are part of a broader infrastructural crisis around the West, have blocked storied salmon […]

Posted inGoat

It’s about dam time

Switches will be flipped today on the Elwha River, as generators at two notorious hydroelectric dams — the Elwha and the Glines Canyon — are turned off. It’s a significant first-step in a process that will continue this summer, prepping the dams for their impending destruction. Now, the pieces have finally fallen into place. This […]

Posted inBlog

The mixed blessings of extra water

A new addition to the “mixed blessings” file: The town of Payson, Arizona, will soon get relief from its perennial water shortage, having cut a deal with utility power-broker Salt River Project for a share of the water from the nearby C.C. Cragin Reservoir (formerly known as the Blue Ridge Reservoir). You can’t blame Payson […]

Posted inWotr

Anatomy of a disaster

The hydrologic havoc playing out in the Mississippi Delta is not a freak of nature. This slow-motion, manmade disaster is our inheritance from a previous generation of politicians, farmers and ranchers, who made bad decisions to correct short-term problems even as the best available science warned of long-term consequences.  Like it or not, we will […]

Posted inRange

Kevin Costner, Western rivers, and climate change

By Heather Hansen, Red Lodge Clearing House Reading the recently-released Bureau of Reclamation (BOR) report—on the impacts of climate change on Western water resources— is like watching Waterworld, that futuristic flop in which Kevin Costner sails around a post-apocalyptic globe that’s been completely inundated by melted polar ice caps, in search of dry land. Waterworld […]

Posted inGoat

Game on in the Wyoming Range

The future of gas leasing in the Wyoming Range is being batted around like a tetherball on a playground as energy companies and conservation groups each take swings. If conservationists win, the gas leases will be scaled back or retired and the mountains protected from development under the 2009 Wyoming Range Legacy Act. If energy […]

Posted inMay 16, 2011: Ripple Effects

The year in water

La Niña ruled the West’s weather this winter, and states now sitting on lavish snowpacks couldn’t be happier. Cooler surface temperatures in the equatorial Pacific are responsible for the high precipitation rates in California, the Northwest and Intermountain West. Those snowpacks are expected to melt at a leisurely rate, buoying streamflows throughout the summer. The […]

Gift this article