

Circle of Blue WaterNews
Circle Of Blue
Founded in 2000 by leading journalists and scientists, Circle of Blue provides relevant, reliable, and actionable on-the-ground information about the world’s resource crises.
With an intense focus on water and its relationships to food, energy, and health, Circle of Blue has created a breakthrough model of front-line reporting, data collection, design, and convening that has evolved with the world’s need to spur new methodology in science, collaboration, innovation, and response. To document emerging and recognized crises, Circle of Blue collaborates with leading scientists and data experts. Through its partnerships, Circle of Blue then dispatches top journalists to map and define the region where the change is occurring. Making connections from localized occurrences to global trends, Circle of Blue publishes these reports online — free of charge — to inform academics, governments, and the general public, catalyzing participation across disciplines, regions, and cultures.
With an intense focus on water and its relationships to food, energy, and health, Circle of Blue has created a breakthrough model of front-line reporting, data collection, design, and convening that has evolved with the world’s need to spur new methodology in science, collaboration, innovation, and response. To document emerging and recognized crises, Circle of Blue collaborates with leading scientists and data experts. Through its partnerships, Circle of Blue then dispatches top journalists to map and define the region where the change is occurring. Making connections from localized occurrences to global trends, Circle of Blue publishes these reports online — free of charge — to inform academics, governments, and the general public, catalyzing participation across disciplines, regions, and cultures.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Sep 21, 2021 • 9min
Water At UN Climate Change Conference
This is an excerpt of the September 20, 2021 episode of What's Up With Water.
When diplomats and government ministers converge on Glasgow this fall, they hope to rekindle pivotal negotiations on global climate that were dampened during the pandemic. They will confront a world much altered since their last convention.
As Covid-19 continues to rampage globally, it has underscored the the contrast between the resources available to the rich and to the poor when dealing with environmental stressors. But further, floods in Germany’s Ahr Valley and wildfires in Greece and the American West prove that no country, rich or poor, is immune to the terrors of a fevered planet, with calamities that were summarized in a recent climate science report from the United Nations.
That report, in the technical language of probabilities and scenarios, emphasized the urgency of the moment. It stressed the need to reduce the release of heat-trapping gases into the atmosphere, and to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius.
Over the past year, torrential floods, exhausting droughts, and deadly heat waves have sharpened focus on the mandate to adapt. Adaptation is moving up the agenda in the weeks preceding the UN’s 26th Climate Change Conference, which runs from October 31 to November 12. Some have taken to calling the Glasgow meeting the “adaptation convention.”

Sep 19, 2021 • 13min
What's Up With Water - September 20, 2021
Your "need to know" news of the world's water from Circle of Blue. This week: a First Nations reserve in Canada gets clean drinking water, environmental activist murders set a new high in 2020, and an NPR investigation finds a federal agency that provides low-income housing is disproportionately selling homes in flood-prone areas. Plus, a CoB feature on on how water fits into the upcoming UN Climate Change Conference.

Sep 13, 2021 • 13min
What's Up With Water - September 13, 2021
Your "need to know" news of the world's water from Circle of Blue. This week: supply chain problems for water treatment chemicals, more of India's poorest households are getting piped water, and editors of medical journals issue a warning about climate change's threat to public health. Plus: a CoB feature on policing water use in California.

Aug 30, 2021 • 7min
Extreme Water Weather & Migration
This is an excerpt of the August 30, 2021 episode of What's Up With Water.
After a year of extreme weather, people in the drylands of northern California and the hurricane-drenched bayous of southern Louisiana are brooding on the same question: should they leave? New global research suggests that one of these two “water shock” scenarios is more likely to result in migration. World Bank researchers found that people are five times as likely to move following drought conditions as they are after floods or periods of excess water.
The finding is part of a report on water and migration released last week during World Water Week, an annual conference. The report details the nuanced relationship between changes in water availability and the movement of people.

Aug 30, 2021 • 12min
What's Up With Water - August 30, 2021
Your "need to know" news of the world's water from Circle of Blue. Stories this week on Egypt's desalination ambitions, research into the cause of devastating floods in Germany last month, and a potential nuclear waste site near Lake Huron. Plus a CoB feature on the World Bank's migration report.

Aug 23, 2021 • 6min
Cuts To Lower Colorado River Basin
This is an excerpt of the August 23, 2021 episode of What's Up With Water.
The implications of the drying American Southwest and the limits to the region’s water supply are increasingly apparent. The federal government marked the changing conditions recently, declaring a Tier 1 shortage for the lower Colorado River basin. The shortage declaration will force Arizona and Nevada, as well as Mexico to further reduce their withdrawals from the river in 2022. California, the other lower basin state, is not affected. The declaration also sets the stage for more drastic measures in the near future since Lake Mead is projected to fall another 30 feet over the next two years.
Mead and Powell, the basin’s largest reservoirs, are the lowest they have been since they were first filled.

Aug 22, 2021 • 10min
What's Up WIth Water - August 23, 2021
Your "need to know" news of the world's water from Circle of Blue. Stories this week on Taliban takeover in Afghanistan, the unusual way the pandemic is affecting water availability in Orlando, and water pollution from the fashion industry in Africa. This week's CoB feature is on cuts to Colorado River water.

Aug 18, 2021 • 4min
IPCC Climate Report & Freshwater
This is an excerpt of the August 16, 2021 episode of What's Up With Water.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a group of the world’s leading climate scientists, has released its sixth assessment report. The 1,300-page paper is the most comprehensive, up-to-date survey of the physical science of climate change. It synthesizes the findings of thousands of recent publications.
The report paints an alarming picture of the future of fresh water. It concludes that man-made contributions to a warming planet are far-reaching.

Aug 16, 2021 • 8min
What's Up With Water August 16, 2021
Your "need to know" news of the world's water, from Circle of Blue. Stories this week on a broadband-water pipe collaboration in the UK, dry wells in the US, and a massive ice melt in Greenland. Plus a CoB feature on the IPCC report.

Aug 9, 2021 • 12min
What's Up With Water - August 9, 2021
Your "need to know" news of the world's water from Circle of Blue. Stories this week on people moving into flood zones, the Canadian government's settlement with First Nations over clean water funding, and drought update in California. Plus a CoB exclusive on waste-to-energy technology.