Media Coverage: Freshwater
Manganese in Underground Drinking Water is Cause for Concern »
Scott Fendorf co-contributor in study that looks into potentially high and dangerous levels of manganese in U.S. Glacial Aquifer and 3 Asian countries.
By Sarah Nightingale,
A picture of seawater intrusion in Marina's aquifers is unveiled. »
Rosemary Knight is mention in relation to her study on groundwater data collection
By David Schmalz,
Commentary: Desalination will not solve California’s water woes »
Op-ed by Water in the West researchers Leon Szeptycki and Newsha Ajami.
By Leon Szeptycki and Newsha Ajami,
"Living Map" created for financing water projects in U.S. »
Discusses Water in the West project, and quote Newsha Ajami on the need for new ideas and solutions for aging infrastructure.
Oxygen-infused 'super water' could protect NYC schools from lead hazards,technology CEO says »
Richard Luthy on the importance of replacing lead piping.
By Amanda Mikelberg,
California’s wet year eases drought but many still lack water »
Noah Diffenbaugh on ongoing effects of California drought.
By Chelsea Whyte,
USGS finds vast reserves of salty water underground in California »
Newsha Ajami discusses water sector progress, the importance of diversified regional water supply portfolios and the possibility of a return to drought conditions in California.
By Devika G. Bansal,
Groundwater over-pumping found reducing ability to store water in California: study »
Discusses research by Rosemary Knight and colleagues.
By Tian Shaohui,
California groundwater supplies remain a mystery »
Leon Szeptyck on the difficulty of quantifying individual withrdrawls from aquifers.
By Tom Elias,
JPL Scientists: Overpumping Reduces California's Groundwater Storage »
Discusses research by Rosemary Knight and colleagues.
Mega-dams, like Hoover, probably wouldn't be built today »
David Freyberg discusses environmental and economic costs of dams.
By Sarah Gardner,
Opinion: Consumers need to pay more for water safety, improvements »
Cites 2015 study by ReNUWIt and Water in the West that found a water public goods charge could help revitalize water systems less expensively than bonds. Such a fee could also help advance a 21st century water system.
By Matt Mahan,
Quarter of California’s snowpack loss is from human-made warming »
Noah Diffenbaugh discusses possible solution to California's water storage woes.
By Chelsea Whyte,
Celebrating the End of California's Drought? Not so Fast, Say Water Experts »
Richard Luthy and Sebastien Tilmans explain how the Codina Resource Recovery Center demonstrates Stanford's ability to deal with the one million gallons of wastewater the campus creates per day.
By Angela Johnston,
In arid Southwest, cities expand but use less water »
Richard Luthy explains why water recycling, not just conservation, is critical to the future of Western cities.
By Zack Colman,
California’s Water System Built for a Climate We No Longer Have »
Noah Diffenbaugh discusses climate changes in California and the effects on the state's water system.
By Lauren Sommer,
Quotes Newsha Ajami and Noah Diffenbaugh on recent heavy rain in California and what it means for infrastructure.
By Rachel Becker,
How the Syrian refugee crisis affected land use and shared transboundary freshwater resources »
Global Freshwater Initiative researchers discuss their investigation of the relationship among civil conflict, land use and water consumption.
By Steven Gorelick, Marc Muller and Jim Yoon,
California Case Could Set National Precedent on Indian Water Rights »
The Agua Caliente tribe in Palm Springs argues it has a right to groundwater. Stanford's Barton H. “Buzz” Thompson explains how a federal court could soon resolve century-old uncertainties around the issue.
By Matt Weiser,
Stanford takes crack at studying Central Coast aquifer seawater intrusion »
Features work by Rosemary Knight to use analyize saltwater intrusion along California's Central Coast with geophysical imaging.
By Jessica York,
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