Nov. 1—As the U.S. Army continues determining how best to clean up groundwater contamination caused by a former biowarfare test site in Frederick, researchers are also studying what protective ...
Officials in Arizona are limiting development in the Phoenix metro area due to a lack of groundwater. But the development party isn't over. A state analysis says Phoenix doesn't have enough ...
The scion of a political dynasty sought to build a subdivision in a water-stressed valley. A judge said no, a decision that could slow development across the state. By Christopher Flavelle A Montana ...
Phoenix, Arizona, is facing not one but two water crises. Around a third of the desert city’s water comes from the beleaguered Colorado River. Thanks to a decades-long megadrought fueled by climate ...
8 December – The UN Groundwater Summit concluded today with a call for Governments and other stakeholders to scale up efforts to better manage groundwater – an invisible life-sustaining resource. “As ...
25 August – Groundwater, which sustains drinking water supplies, sanitation systems, farms, industries and ecosystems, is being overused, polluted and neglected, speakers warned at a World Water Week ...
Large developers are still getting rights to extract groundwater in Central Oregon, even while an increasing number of residential wells are running dry. OPB’s Bend bureau chief Emily Cureton Cook ...
Bradley Hiller does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond ...
Corrections & Clarifications: An earlier version of this column mischaracterized how future subdivisions could earn a certificate based on 100-year supply of water. Houses can no longer grow on ...
The metropolitan area of Phoenix, Ariz., is growing rapidly. A recent state analysis shows Phoenix does not have enough groundwater to sustain that rate of growth over the next century. But developers ...
A state analysis says Phoenix doesn't have enough groundwater to sustain the metro area's rapid growth over the next century. But developers say, hang on, that's not the whole story. KJZZ's Katherine ...
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