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Arizona’s San Pedro River Runs Dry for the Second Time in 122 Years

For the second time in 122 years, a sensitive gauge measuring the San Pedro River’s streamflow near Sierra Vista went dry, a reading conservationists say is bad news for one of the Southwest’s last free-flowing rivers.

On June 22, the river stopped flowing at a U.S. Geological Survey stream gauge east of the city. That site, known as the Charleston gauge, monitors the river’s water level at the surface and remained at zero for over two weeks.

OPINION: Conservation Isn’t Enough for California’s Weather Whiplash, We Need Reliable Water

It wasn’t that long ago that drought dominated the West.

From 2014 to 2017 and again from 2021 to 2023, record after record was broken as clear skies and relentless sunshine became the norm. The governor’s office initiated statewide prohibitions on “wasteful water use,” mandating that cities, towns, and urban water suppliers reduce their potable water consumption by 25 percent. Central Valley farms received 8.7 million acre-feet less surface water than in a normal year, forcing growers to pump groundwater to keep permanent crops alive.

California Lawmakers Seek ‘Forever Chemicals’ Protections — Despite EPA Rollbacks

As the Trump administration delays regulations on “forever chemicals” that pollute reservoirs, rivers and aquifers nationwide, California officials say they are unsure what the consequences will be for an estimated 1.5 million Californians served by utilities with contaminated sources of drinking water.

With uncertainty over when regulations on some of the most common of these cancer-causing pollutants, called per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances or PFAS, will take effect in California, lawmakers are floating alternative plans to remove them from the state’s tap water.

U.S. Supreme Court To Hear Colorado-Nebraska Water Dispute

The U.S. Supreme Court has decided to weigh in on the latest water squabble in the West, where Nebraska has accused Colorado of violating a century-old water rights agreement.

Colorado has since filed its own response, asking the Supreme Court to reject Nebraska’s lawsuit over the river rights dispute.

What ‘Very Strong’ El Niño Odds Mean for California’s Largest Reservoirs

A developing El Niño is forecast to become unusually powerful this winter, which could hold major implications for California’s water supply, reservoirs and flood risk.

The odds of a “very strong” El Niño—defined by exceptionally warm sea-surface temperatures in the equatorial Pacific—have increased dramatically as the event develops. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) latest outlook, released Thursday, shows a 75 to 81 percent chance of a very strong event between November and January, the heart of California’s wet season.

Trump Administration OKs California Company’s Plan To Pipe Water out of the Mojave Desert

The company Cadiz Inc. has been trying for years to pump groundwater in the Mojave Desert and ship it to thirsty cities in California. Now, the Trump administration has signed off on part of its plan: converting an oil and gas pipeline to transport water across the desert.

The federal Bureau of Land Management released documents Thursday saying the company’s plan to repurpose 162 miles of the pipeline to transport water “will not significantly affect” the environment.

California’s Largest Lake Is Turning to Dust

Michelle Dugan-Delgado has had asthma for as long as she can remember. It’s why she always takes an inhaler and face mask with her when she leaves the house — just in case the wind picks up and a dust storm hits.

“I know that it’s not safe for me to go outside,” she told DW. “It’s like I live in a bubble. I have to really protect myself.”

What Happens if China Hacks the US Water Supply? I Went to a Secret War Game to Find Out

It’s around an hour and 10 minutes into the role-playing game I’ve been invited to observe, a simulated catastrophic cyberattack on US water utilities, when the whole thing begins to feel less like a fun afternoon playing Dungeons & Dragons and more like a plausible threat to civilization.

A full 24 hours of in-game time have passed since hackers disrupted 5,000 water utilities across the United States in this imagined scenario. Joshua Corman, the former Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency strategist serving as our dungeon master, stands at the front of a conference space in an office tower high above Times Square, narrating the latest updates to the game’s participants, a few dozen insurance executives set up in six teams. All of them have gone disturbingly silent.

Newsom Looks To Lock In His Water Agenda

Gov. Gavin Newsom is putting his stamp on the powerful agency overseeing California’s biggest water fights — and racing to get his pet projects across the finish line before his term ends.

Jared Blumenfeld, Newsom’s former CalEPA secretary, took his seat for the first time Tuesday on the five-member State Water Resources Control Board days after Newsom appointed him to replace Laurel Firestone, the environmental justice advocate who stepped down last month to “pursue other opportunities” in water.

Golden Mussels Plague Farms and Water Districts, California Farm Bureau Reports

The spread of golden mussels in California has alarmed farmers this year as the invasive species established itself in waterways across much of the state.

In the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, the freshwater mollusks began obstructing irrigation systems that sustain billions of dollars’ worth of tree nuts, winegrapes, tomatoes and other crops.