Freshwater

Freshwater

Freshwater. It’s essential to our survival. But challenges ranging from climate change to rising populations threaten water supplies around the globe. Stanford researchers are tackling those problems with novel approaches that cross academic disciplines. They range from a high-tech wastewater resource recovery center to decision-making tools illustrating major groundwater challenges and potential fixes. To advance innovative research in the field, the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment supports two programs. The Global Freshwater Initiative develops strategies to ensure the long-term viability of water supplies. The Water in the West Program creates and promotes strategies for more effective water management in the American West. Through these and other Woods initiatives, Stanford researchers are working to provide adequate supply and access to safe water for people.

In The News

PPIC Report Finds Reforms Would Improve the Way California Allocates Water

Discusses a new report co-authored by Woods Co-Director and Senior Fellow Buzz Thompson and Leon Szeptycki, Woods professor of the practice and...
November 18, 2015 - By , Sierra Sun Times

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To Save Water, an Underground Movement to Bank El Niño's Rainfall

Cites a brief by Water in the West researchers which found that the $2.7 billion in Prop 1 funding for water storage could provide six times more...
November 9, 2015 - By Bettina Boxall, LA Times

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Californians Take Drought Lessons From Down Under

Quotes Rebecca Nelson, Non-resident Fellow, Comparative Groundwater Law and Policy Program at Water in the West, on how Australia handled an nine-...
November 2, 2015 - By Craig Miller, KQED

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Stanford Project Maps Underground Water -- Aimed At Taking the Guesswork Out of Well Drilling

Profiles research by Senior Fellow, by courtesy, Rosemary Knight on her work mapping underground water in California's Central Valley.
October 30, 2015 - By Lisa M. Krieger, San Jose Mercury News

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