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California to deal with 'extreme weather cycle' as new 'water year' begins
With Lake Oroville brimming beyond average, California's water year begins with the threat of extreme weather on its way.
California's Department of Water Resources (DWR) on Monday provided an update on the state's snowpack levels and warned that with a dry forecast ahead, the marks could stay below normal during a ...
California’s weather whiplash has left the Golden State in a place of severe uncertainty about its diminishing water supply and increasing human and environmental demands for water. Research that my ...
Don’t Tax Innovation: The Patent ‘Wealth Tax’ Is a Terrible Idea Fed Independence Is a Myth Worth Keeping Take It from Albuquerque: Free Transit Is a Bad Idea When Financial Industry Regulators Are ...
FRESNO, Calif. (KFSN) -- A new study shows thousands of jobs could be at risk due to uncertain water supplies for Central California farmers. Making matters worse, the Sierra Nevada snowpack is at ...
SANTA CLARA, Calif. (KGO) -- Bay Area reservoirs are filling up from powerful rainstorms. Santa Clara Valley Water District spokesperson Matt Keller said after the dry start to the year, water levels ...
In the heart of California’s Central Valley, generations of farm families are facing a new kind of crisis — too much water one year, not enough the next and mounting regulations that could determine ...
State and federal agencies that control California’s major water systems in the Central Valley announced plans to deliver more water supplies to the state’s farms and cities. The increase in water ...
Imagine watching two Lake Shastas' worth of water slip through our fingers—gone, not because we lacked rain, but because we lacked the infrastructure and strategy to store it. That’s the reality we’re ...
A University of California economic analysis finds that California’s water supply deficiencies could create losses between $3.4 and $14.5 billion annually across agriculture and manufacturing sectors.
The US Army Corps of Engineers opened two dams on Friday in Central California and let roughly 2.2 billion gallons of water flow out of reservoirs, after President Donald Trump ordered the release ...
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