Entries by Brett Walton

Agriculture in Transition in the West Texas Plains

As in much of the Great Plains, farmers here are adapting to new conditions. Photo © Brett Walton/Circle of Blue Farmer Glenn Schur talks to a group of journalists about growing cotton in the Texas High Plains. The Euclidian scrape of the West Texas plains is both mesmerizing and terrifying. Mesmerizing in their simplicity–cotton field, […]

Clean Water Act Turns 40 (Part I): Cities Fall In Love With Rivers Again

Today, the Clean Water Act is 40 years old. Though it brought substantial benefits to urban areas, water quality problems — some old, some new — persist in the United States.

Federal Water Tap, October 15: Reports on Western Water-efficiency Program and the Great Lakes

Three years into its agency-wide water efficiency and conservation program, the Interior Department has given itself a gold star and a pat on the back in an assessment report released last week. Ordered by Congress and shaped by Secretary Ken Salazar, the WaterSMART program is on track to meet its top goal of conserving 730,000 […]

Voices from the Past: Nixon, Congress Debate the Clean Water Act

Four decades ago, national leaders talked about our duty and responsibility to cut water pollution–and about its costs. Image courtesy of EPA Documerica/Charles Steinhacker Sludge floats on the Androscoggin River above Gulf Island Dam near Lewiston, Maine in this photo taken in June 1973. October 18, 2012 marks 40 years since Congress passed the Clean […]

China and Netherlands to Research Novel Form of Large-scale Tidal Power

The long-term goal: a project with a power capacity greater than the world’s second-largest hydropower dam.

Federal Water Tap, October 8: The Army Corps of Engineers’ Tattered Empire

The primary role of the Army Corps of Engineers, a key agency in the nation’s water management system, is shifting from the construction of new works to the repair and maintenance of existing ones, yet it does not have the funding to ensure its dams, levees, and river channels function properly, according to a report […]

Protests Break Out After India’s Supreme Court Rules in Favor of Downstream State in Cauvery River Dispute

A decades-long quarrel over water allocations boils up again during this year’s dry summer, ending in farmer protests and increased security.

Marine Ecologist Studying the Gulf of Mexico Dead Zone Named MacArthur Fellow

To explain water quality in the Gulf, Dr. Nancy Rabalais looked upstream. Photo by Daymon Gardner/Getty Images for Home Front Communications Dr. Nancy Rabalais stand on a boat at the Louisiana University Marine Consortium in Cocodrie, Louisiana. Like the wake that trails a great ship, awards are coming in waves to honor the work of […]

Federal Water Tap, October 1: Obama Administration Discusses Green Infrastructure

On September 20, the White House Council on Environmental Quality and the Environmental Protection Agency hosted a conference to talk about the latest craze in urban development: green infrastructure. Among those participating were government officials, utility leaders, investors, businesses, and environmental organizations. Katherine Baer, director of the clean water program for American Rivers, spoke at […]

Ruinous Drought Tests Kansas Model for Supplying Water to Farms

As the 2012 drought smothers the Great Plains, Kansas water laws — written to steady the economy, ecology, and use — are actually working. Image courtesy of U.S. Department of Agriculture A grain elevator looms over a railroad crossing in Prescott, Kansas. The U.S. Department of Agriculture forecasts that corn yields in Kansas this year […]

Federal Water Tap, September 24: Congress Lame Ducks Itself

Congress adjourned until after the November elections, leaving quite a bit of work on the table for a short lame-duck session. In addition to anticipated debates about fiscal policy, there are a few water-related bills that might be considered at year’s end. In a hearing last week, Senate committee chair Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) said she […]

Federal Water Tap, September 17: Congress Talks Water; Scientists Look at Glaciers and Biofuels

Sometime this week, the House of Representatives will consider H.R. 3409, which its sponsor, an Ohio Republican, has dubbed the Stop the War on Coal Act of 2012. The bill would prevent the Interior Department from issuing regulations until December 2013 that might cut jobs in the coal sector or restrict the industry’s access to […]