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

Race to Abate Arundo in Salinas River is Slow-Paced

Leon Szeptycki, Woods professor of the practice and executive director of the Water in the West program, discusses the concept of privately owning...
October 23, 2015 - By Natalie Jacewicz, The Californian

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Is Freshwater Supply More Dependent on Good Governance Than Geography?

Discusses findings of study co-authored by Woods Senior Fellows Steven Gorelick (Earth System Science), Barton Thompson (Law) and Scott Fendorf (...
October 23, 2015 - By , Phys.org

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VIDEO: Fresno, California, Aims to Recharge its Dwindling Groundwater

Tara Moran, Program Lead of Sustainable Groundwater at Water in the West, discusses the repercussions of drought on groundwater in Fresno, California...
October 9, 2015 - By Zoe Meyers, High Country News

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China's Sponge Cities: Soaking Up Water to Reduce Flood Risks

Senior Fellow Dick Luthy (engineering) states that "sponge cities" are a new way of thinking about stormwater, not as a problem but as an...
October 1, 2015 - By Mark Harris, The Guardian

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