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1402 Resources


Huffington Post: Where Does California’s Agricultural Water Go?

April 29, 2015 | post


Water plays a vital role in California's agricultural sector, using 80% of the water used by humans in the state. In recent months, water challenges imposed by the current severe drought have brought this agricultural water use into the limelight, raising new questions about how the water is used.


California Agricultural Water Use: Key Background Information

April 29, 2015 | publication


California is a key producer of agricultural goods that are consumed all over the world.


Comment Letter on the Status of the Salton Sea Management Program

April 28, 2015 | publication


This comment letters sent to the California State Water Resources Control Board (Water Board) urged the Water Board to direct the Salton Sea Management Program to review and act upon previous recommendations and suggestions, as well as those described in the letter, and to accelerate efforts on behalf of California’s Salton Sea and the people and wildlife who depend on it.


Water Use Trends in the United States

April 15, 2015 | publication


This report analyzes and explains the factors contributing to the positive trend of decreasing water use, and examines the implications for future water demand. National water use remains high, and many freshwater systems are under stress from overuse. Climate change will exacerbate existing challenges, affecting the supply, demand, and quality of the nation’s water resources.


New Data Show California Cities’ Response to Drought Is Highly Uneven

March 24, 2015 | post


As California heads into its fourth consecutive year of drought, and pronouncements about our water supply are increasingly dire, new data released by the state show that water use and water conservation efforts in cities across the state are highly uneven.


National Geographic ScienceBlog: The Impacts of California’s Drought on Hydroelectricity Production

March 17, 2015 | post


California’s hottest and driest drought in recorded history has shifted the sources of electricity with adverse economic and environmental consequences. The Pacific Institute has just completed and released a report that evaluates how diminished river flows have resulted in less hydroelectricity, more expensive electricity from the combustion of natural gas, and increased production of greenhouse gas emissions.


Impacts of California’s Ongoing Drought: Hydroelectricity Generation

March 17, 2015 | publication


California’s hottest and driest drought in recorded history, from 2012 to 2016, shifted the sources of energy for electricity with adverse economic and environmental consequences. This report focuses on the period of drought from 2011 to 2014.


The Water Footprint of California’s Energy System, 1990–2012

March 11, 2015 | publication


A new article by Julian Fulton and  Heather Cooley evaluates the amount of water consumed in meeting California’s energy needs – also referred to as the water footprint of energy.


History of Water Conflicts

March 9, 2015 | video



National Geographic ScienceBlog: Tackling Global Sustainability: A Need for Integrated Systems Approaches

February 27, 2015 | post


If there is anything that the past few decades of research and study of major global challenges tells us, it is that truly effective solutions to sustainability challenges require truly integrated approaches across disciplines, fields of study, data sets, and institutions. We are not going to solve 21st century global problems with 20th century tools.



Weather and Climate Summit

January 21, 2015 | video



Guidance for Companies on Respecting the Human Rights to Water and Sanitation

January 16, 2015 | publication


In 2007, the United Nations Global Compact (UNGC) was created as a strategic policy initiative for businesses committed to aligning their operations and strategies with 10 principles related to human rights, labor, environment, and anti-corruption.


California Urban Water Suppliers Water Use Map

January 14, 2015 | publication


This web app from the Pacific Institute shows how different California cities are responding to the ongoing drought. This web feature brings to life newly-released data on residential and system-wide water use, and allows users to explore trends and patterns in that use.


National Geographic ScienceBlogs: The State of the California Drought: Still Very Bad

January 14, 2015 | post


While we do not know yet what the rest of the wet season will bring – and while we hope for the major storms needed to recharge our rivers, groundwater and reservoirs – it seems increasingly likely that California will not see enough precipitation to get out of the very deep deficit that three years of drought (so far) have produced.


Career Spotlight: Water Program Director

December 13, 2014 | video



National Geographic ScienceBlogs: The Growing Influence of Climate Change on the California Drought

December 8, 2014 | post


Over the past three years (and indeed, for 10 of the past 14 years) California has experienced a particularly deep drought. How bad is the drought? Is it the worst in the instrumental record? The worst in over a century? The worst in 1200 years? The worst “ever”? And why has it been so bad?


New Data Show Residential Per Capita Water Use across California

November 18, 2014 | post


New monthly water use data for California water utilities shows that residential water use varies widely around the state, and that the response to the drought has been uneven.



National Geographic ScienceBlogs: Peak Water: United States Water Use Drops to Lowest Level in 40 Years

November 5, 2014 | post


The most important trend in the use of water is the slowly unfolding story of peak water in the United States and elsewhere.


Huffington Post: The California Water Bond is a Beginning, Not an End: Here’s What’s Next

November 5, 2014 | post


California voters have approved Proposition 1 - the 2014 California Water Bond. The ultimate value and effectiveness of the bond will depend on how it is implemented and how the funds are spent.


Huffington Post: What Does Proposition 1 — the 2014 California Water Bond — Really Say?

October 23, 2014 | post


On November 4, California voters will decide the fate of Proposition 1 -- the 2014 Water Bond -- which authorizes the sale of $7.12 billion in new general obligation bonds and the reallocation of an additional $425 million of previously authorized, but unissued, bonds.


Insights into Proposition 1: The 2014 California Water Bond

October 23, 2014 | publication


This report provides a comprehensive analysis of Proposition 1, the Water Quality, Supply and Infrastructure Improvement Act of 2014, which was approved by California voters in November 2014.



Huffington Post: When Our Responses to Drought Make Things Worse

October 20, 2014 | post


In a new study just published by the journal Sustainability Science (Springer), analysis from the Pacific Institute shows that many of the fundamental responses of California water...


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