I don’t have live access to current news in this moment. Based on recent patterns, here’s a concise update, and I can fetch fresh details if you’d like.
- Context: The Colorado River drought has been a long-running, multi-year issue affecting water deliveries to about 40 million people in the U.S. West, with federal and regional actions aimed at reducing usage and preventing critical reservoir levels.
- Recent themes you’ll likely see in latest coverage: renewed or extended drought declarations; status updates on Lake Mead and Lake Powell elevations; negotiations among seven basin states on water cuts and long-term management; impacts on cities, agriculture, and power generation; and federal planning timelines tied to expiration of existing shortage guidelines.
Would you like me to pull the latest articles from today and summarize them with citations? If you have a preferred news outlet or format (bullet points, short briefs, or a timeline), tell me and I’ll tailor it.
Sources
Water levels at Lake Mead, the rapidly-depleting reservoir at Hoover Dam, may force the federal government to make a drastic and historic decision affecting Southwest farmers.
www.cbsnews.comWater levels at Lake Mead, the rapidly-depleting reservoir at Hoover Dam, may force the federal government to make a drastic and historic decision affecting Southwest farmers.
www.cbsnews.comCurrent plans for reducing water use along the Colorado River should be sufficient to stave off risks of reservoirs reaching critically low levels over the next three years, according to a new analysis by the federal government.
phys.orgThe megadrought gripping the western states is only part of the problem. Alternative sources of water are also imperiled, and the nation’s food along with it.
www.propublica.orgFederal officials ordered the first-ever water cuts on the Colorado River system that sustains 40 million people, the latest blow from a decades-long drought across the U.S. West that has shrunk reservoirs to historic lows, devastated farms and set the stage for deadly forest fires.
news.bloomberglaw.com