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On the calendar today …
- WEBINAR: CalWATRS for Organizations from 11am to 12pm. You are invited to attend a webinar on CalWATRS (California Water Accounting, Tracking, and Reporting System). This webinar will provide an overview of how businesses, agencies, and other groups can activate organization profiles, add users, access water right records, and navigate key system features. Join by Zoom: bit.ly/CalWATRSOrgs
- WIIN Act Quarterly Meeting from 1pm to 3pm. A quarterly meeting to provide an update on the Long-Term Operation of the Central Valley Project and State Water Project, pursuant to the Water Infrastructure Improvements for the Nation Act. Teams meeting: Join the meeting now
- WEBINAR: CalWATRS for Agents from 1:30pm to 2:30pm. You are invited to attend a webinar on CalWATRS (California Water Accounting, Tracking, and Reporting System). This webinar will cover how water rights agents can set up CalWATRS accounts, become the official agent of a water right, and view and manage client records. Join by Zoom: bit.ly/CalWATRSAgents
In California water news today …
California signals fight over federal plan to increase Delta water exports
“California Attorney General Rob Bonta is “looking at all available options to respond,” his office said Monday in response to the Bureau of Reclamation’s decision last week that updates the Central Valley Project’s operating plan to permit higher water exports from the Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta. “This politically motivated decision creates new risks for water availability, especially for Southern California cities, and the health of California’s waterways, fish, and wildlife,” said a press officer for Bonta in an email to The Sacramento Bee. On Thursday, the Bureau of Reclamation approved Action 5, revising the long-term operating plan for the Central Valley Project and allowing greater flexibility in Delta operations — a step consistent with the Trump administration’s broader push to increase federal water supplies. The move drew strong resistance from California in President Donald Trump’s first term and again now. … ” Read more from the Sacramento Bee (gift article).
“Action 5” to increase water to California’s Central Valley
“Late on Thursday, Dec. 4, the Bureau of Reclamation announced it was adopting Action 5, an updated operation plan for the Central Valley Project and the State Water Plan in California. Among other things, the plan is projected to increase annual water deliveries to central and southern California, will remove seasonal protections for the Delta smelt, and will require that any actions that restrict the water supply “provide a material benefit to listed species.” “Action 5 represents a forward-looking approach to water management that balances the needs of California’s communities, agriculture and ecosystems,” said Andrea Travnicek, Bureau of Reclamation assistant secretary for water and science, in the group’s announcement. … ” Read more from The Packer.
SEE ALSO: Reclamation plans to take more water from the Delta, from Tom Cannon at the California Fisheries blog
The biggest threat to the Delta you’ve (probably) never heard of

“In 1962, when Mary Hildebrand was 10 years old, her family moved to their farm between the communities of Vernalis and Mossdale in the southern tip of California’s Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. The 140-acre farm sits on the banks of the San Joaquin River, which squiggles north through the flat expanse of the South Delta toward its confluence with the Sacramento River. … “It was wild and wonderful,” says Hildebrand, who still lives in her family home. She and her sister spent summers swimming and sailing in the slough that connected to the San Joaquin River mainstem, and often spied weasels, muskrats, meadowlarks and other wildlife. Today Hildebrand rarely sees wildlife apart from the raccoons and coyotes that thrive even in heavily degraded ecosystems. Invasive plants like water hyacinth and Egeria densa infest nearby sloughs and channels. Her farm, which she worked with her mom and dad and now leases to a neighbor, is also at risk. In wet years, Hildebrand worries that the water bordering her land will rise and inundate the fields. In dry years, she worries that the water will drop below the pumps that irrigate the rows of sweet corn and lima beans. In both types of water extremes, the culprit is the same: build up of sediment that chokes South Delta channels. Silt and sandbars diminish channel capacity, causing floods and blocking water from reaching irrigation pumps. … ” Read the full story by Robin Meadows at Maven’s Notebook.
California’s salmon may be rebounding after three wet winters
“Earlier this year, our senior fellow Jeff Mount and UC Davis’s Carson Jeffres explained that three “wettish” years in a row offered a crucial opportunity for salmon to recover from the 2020–22 drought. We sat down with them this month to get an update. Q: So, catch us up. How did things pan out? A: Jeff: Before Carson gives his assessment, I should stress how unusual these past three years have been. If you look at the parts of the state that produce most of our salmon—the Sacramento River and North Coast hydrologic regions—you had three consecutive average- to above-average years of precipitation. The last time that happened was in the late 1990s, more than 25 years ago. And before that, it happened in the early ‘80s. Usually, a dry year or multiple dry years separate wet years in California. … ” Read more from the PPIC.
West Coast Chinook salmon denied federal protections
“The federal government on Monday denied listing the Western Coast Chinook salmon as threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species Act. The decision came after what the National Marine Fisheries Service called a comprehensive review of the Oregon Coast and Southern Oregon and Northern California Coastal Chinook salmon. The agency examined the issue after a petition called for listing them as threatened or endangered and designating their habitat as critical. “Based on the best scientific and commercial information available, including the status review report, and taking into account efforts being made to protect the species, we have determined that the … Chinook salmon [evolutionarily significant units] do not warrant listing,” the service stated in its 12-month finding on the petition. The Center for Biological Diversity, one of the groups calling for the listing, blasted the decision in a statement. … ” Read more from the Courthouse News Service.
SEE ALSO: Feds deny protection for Oregon/Northern California Chinook Salmon, from KOBI 5
Charlton “Chuck” Bonham named The Nature Conservancy’s California Executive Director
“The Nature Conservancy (TNC) today announced the selection of Charlton “Chuck” Bonham as Executive Director of its California business unit, effective January 26, 2026. Bonham steps into one of the organization’s most strategically important leadership roles as escalating climate change and biodiversity loss reshape California and global regions. “Chuck Bonham is an exceptional conservation leader,” said CEO of The Nature Conservancy Jennifer Morris. “His steadfast commitment to the people and nature of California, his vision for protecting biodiversity and his proven ability to guide complex organizations through intricate challenges will be instrumental in advancing TNC’s mission. California’s role in achieving TNC’s goals is pivotal, and Chuck will help us act with urgency to create a future where people and nature thrive.” … ” Read more from The Nature Conservancy.
SEE ALSO: California’s top wildlife manager leaves post for the Nature Conservancy, from the San Francisco Chronicle
California’s cold, gloomy weather masks a developing problem: Almost no rain in 3 weeks
“So about the weekend. It ended up much cooler than forecast across the board. This year’s tule fog layer is proving to be exceptionally stubborn, even expanding its coverage over the North Bay and East Bay. The result was a weekend of high temperatures running 10 to 20 degrees below normal. The miserable stretch of cloudy, cool weather goes on for Sacramento and the Central Valley. Over the past two weeks, Sacramento’s average daily high has been 50 degrees, the coldest late-November/early December stretch since 1972. The fog and cool conditions deserve the spotlight for now, but another storyline is lurking underneath. San Francisco hasn’t had measurable rain since Nov. 20, 18 days ago. That’s notable during California’s “rainy” season, and it’s been easy to miss because November was such a wet month. Perhaps even more notable is that the forecast shows no rain in the foreseeable future. A combination of atmospheric factors, from stratospheric warming to a broad ridge of high pressure, has kept the state high and dry, and will continue to do so this week. … ” Read more from the San Francisco Chronicle.
Mountains are warming faster than valleys, and the West’s water supply is at risk, study finds
“New research shows that mountain regions around the world are warming faster than the lowlands below them. Scientists say that could have big consequences for the Mountain West, where communities rely on snow and ice for their water supply. A new global review examined more than 200 studies on how climate change is affecting high-elevation environments. The researchers found that rising temperatures are changing the way winter works in mountain landscapes: more storms are falling as rain instead of snow, and the snow that does accumulate is disappearing earlier in the spring. Those changes disrupt the natural “water-tower” function that mountains play for much of the West, said John Knowles, a researcher at Montana State University and a co-author of the study. “They collect precipitation all winter long,” he said. “They store it as snowpack, and then they release it slowly as nature’s drip irrigation system all summer long, when we need it the most.” … ” Read more from KUNR.
States push to end secrecy over data center water use

“States facing drought and dwindling groundwater supplies are seeking to pull back the curtain on water use at data centers, in a push for transparency that has scrambled traditional partisan alliances. Lawmakers from at least eight states this year introduced legislation to require data centers to report their water use, which supporters say is crucial to protecting consumers and managing a finite resource. Driven by concerns about artificial intelligence’s environmental footprint, the effort is generating support — and skepticism — from both sides of the aisle. In New Jersey and California, bills requiring data center water use reporting passed both legislative chambers but were vetoed by Democratic governors. In Virginia, a bill authorizing local governments to evaluate data center noise, water and land-use impacts was vetoed by Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin. … ” Read more from E&E News.
Environmental groups demand a nationwide freeze on data center construction
“More than 200 environmental organizations signed a letter to Congress supporting a national moratorium on the approval and construction of new data centers. The letter, sent Monday, highlights these centers’ impacts on water resources, electricity rates and greenhouse gas emissions. Data centers often suck up large amounts of water to cool their computers. They require a lot of electricity to run their servers, often leading to higher regional utility rates and upgrades to the electricity grid to accommodate them. Some utilities are planning to build natural gas plants to serve the new load, while some data-center companies are even building their own plants, increasing local greenhouse gas emissions. It is near-impossible to paint a complete picture of the energy and water use of data centers, and the corresponding climate impacts, given the limited data that companies provide. A November study in the journal Nature Sustainability predicted that, depending on the speed of expansion, the artificial intelligence industry could emit as much carbon dioxide each year as 10 million cars, Inside Climate News reported. … ” Read more from Inside Climate News.
PFAS in pregnant women’s drinking water puts their babies at higher risk, study finds
“When pregnant women drink water that comes from wells downstream of sites contaminated with PFAS, known as “forever chemicals,” the risks to their babies’ health substantially increase, a new study found. These risks include the chance of low birth weight, preterm birth and infant mortality. Even more troubling, our team of economic researchers and hydrologists found that PFAS exposure increases the likelihood of extremely low-weight and extremely preterm births, which are strongly associated with lifelong health challenges. … ” Read more from The Conversation.
SEE ALSO:
- Study shows dangers of ‘forever chemicals’ on babies, from the Washington Post
- New research links health impacts related to ‘forever chemicals’ to billions in economic losses, from Arizona State University
In regional water news and commentary today …
NORTH COAST
Klamath Tribes seek to reverse judge’s removal in water rights case
“The Klamath Tribes filed a motion Nov. 19 in Klamath County Circuit Court seeking to amend their petition to overturn what they call illegal orders that removed the longtime administrative law judge overseeing the Klamath Basin Adjudication (KBA). Tribal leaders say the judge’s removal followed a secret agreement between Oregon’s Office of Administrative Hearings and Upper Klamath Basin water users. In August, Chief Administrative Law Judge Jeffrey Rhoades replaced Joe Allen, who had presided over the KBA for years. The Tribes say the move ignored two prior rulings — in November 2024 and March 2025 — that rejected challenges to Allen by the Upper Basin Irrigators and affirmed he should remain on the case. The Upper Basin Irrigators later sued Rhoades and the Office of Administrative Hearings in Marion County Circuit Court, seeking Allen’s removal. Instead of defending the administrative process, the Office reached a confidential agreement with the irrigators that resulted in Allen being taken off the KBA cases. Other parties — including the Klamath Tribes and the federal government — were not notified. … ” Read more from Native News Online.
Shasta-Trinity National Forest officials issue order to curb invasive golden mussels
“Shasta-Trinity National Forest officials have enacted a forest order to prevent the spread of invasive golden mussels. The order prohibits the “possession and transportation of golden mussels, zebra mussels and quagga mussels to five lakes within the forest,” according to a U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service press release. Native to Southeast Asia and China, golden mussels were first discovered in North America in the Bay-Delta near Stockton in October 2024, and they were suspected to have arrived on a commercial ship. The invasive species can spread rapidly once established, significantly damaging surrounding ecosystems, infrastructure, agriculture and economies. … ” Read more from the Shasta Scout.
MOUNTAIN COUNTIES
When will it snow again in Tahoe? Here’s what the weather models show
“The Sierra is a sad, bare sight this year — bad news for Californians eager to flock to winter playgrounds as the holidays approach. A sequence of unusually warm November storms, followed by more than two weeks with no precipitation, has left the mountains with a strikingly thin and patchy snowpack. There is snow on the high peaks, but the coverage is light, uneven and more reminiscent of early May than mid-December. The picture is particularly bleak around Tahoe. Several long-running snow sensors are reporting their lowest early-December snow depths on record. By this point in a normal December, many of these sites would have typically received around 15% of their annual snowfall. … ” Read more from the San Francisco Chronicle.
Advancing meadow restoration in the north Yuba landscape
“Last year, SYRCL received grant funding from the Sierra Meadows Partnership Block Grant to advance meadow restoration within the North Yuba Landscape Resiliency Project footprint. The goal of this project is to assess every meadow in the North Yuba so that we can prioritize sites for restoration. This project will set SYRCL and partners up to make informed decisions about where our work is needed most, and where it can have the biggest impact. When meadows become degraded, they lose the outsized ecological benefits of a healthy meadow. Water that should be stored for late summer flows rushes out of the system. The meadow loses its ability to filter sediments, recharge groundwater, provide a firebreak in the event of a catastrophic wildfire, and provide habitat for wetland species. A degraded meadow can even become a carbon source, as opposed to a healthy meadow’s ability to sequester carbon. … ” Read more from the South Yuba River Citizens League.
Divers prepare for Tahoe’s deepest dive for massive lake cleanup
“A Tahoe nonprofit is preparing for its most ambitious lake cleanup to date, sending divers deeper than ever to tackle debris along the full 72-mile shoreline. Clean Up The Lake, known for its environmental dive team and SCUBA cleanups, is launching the 72-Mile Deep Clean of Lake Tahoe. The project follows a previous 72-mile cleanup in shallower waters from zero to 25 feet, which began in 2022. The latest phase will extend cleanup efforts to 35–55 feet, requiring new technology, including diver propulsion vehicles and Nitrox gas to increase efficiency and allow divers to work up to 30 feet deeper than before. … ” Read more from Channel 2.
Forest Service seeks feedback on Caldor Fire restoration
“The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service is seeking comments on the draft environmental assessment for the Caldor Fire Restoration Project on the Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit. Public comments will be accepted for 30 days from Friday, Dec. 5, 2025. This environmental document will guide restoration activities on approximately 11,700 acres of national forest lands in and around the Caldor Fire area. Proposed actions are intended to improve watershed health, forest resilience and wildlife habitat. “Without assistance, the Caldor Fire area could take decades to recover,” said Forest Supervisor Erick Walker. “The activities we are proposing will help re-establish forested areas, reduce hazardous fuels near neighborhoods, improve wildlife habitat and restore ecological function of streams and meadows impacted by the Caldor Fire.” … ” Read more from South Tahoe Now.
SACRAMENTO VALLEY
What is the state of Sacramento’s flood control?
“The heat of summer is in the rearview mirror as California enters the wet part of the year. This also comes with an increased risk of flooding, especially for places like Sacramento which sits along the banks of the American and Sacramento rivers. The region has seen significant development and construction in low-lying areas and historic floodplains, which are at greater risk when waters rise. The city and county have an extensive network of flood control infrastructure in place, from miles of levees to the Yolo Bypass, and several projects are underway to help shore up protection across the region. However, some of these projects are running into setbacks and opposition. An ongoing effort to expand the 109-year-old Sacramento Weir encountered unexpected settling earlier this year along the north abutment wall. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers says the issue could delay the project by approximately one year. … ” Read more from Capital Public Radio.
Storms once sunk Sacramento under 10 feet of water. ‘An inland sea’
“The rain began to fall on Dec. 9, 1861. It didn’t relent until hundreds of miles of the Central Valley turned into an inland sea, leaving the city of Sacramento submerged beneath 10 feet of water. The disaster became known as the Great Flood. “Rivers overflowed, levees were breached and vast areas were submerged under water,” the U.S. Geological Survey said. By the time the crisis ended in January 1862, the flood had claimed an estimated 4,000 lives, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said. An estimated 200,000 cattle in California drowned, “destroying possibly a fourth of the state’s taxable wealth,” the Monterey County Historical Society said. … ” Read more from the Sacramento Bee.
NAPA/SONOMA
Coho salmon found in Sonoma Coast creek for first time in 60 years
“The excitement started with a flash of silver followed by a hefty dose of disbelief. A team of conservationists and biologists from The Wildlands Conservancy, the nonprofit that manages the 5,600-acre Jenner Headlands Preserve on the Sonoma Coast, couldn’t believe what they were seeing: the telltale color and shape of juvenile coho salmon, darting back and forth in the clear current of the East Branch Russian Gulch. It had been decades since the endangered fish had made its way to that arm of the watershed. And yet there they were, as Ryan Berger, Corby Hines and Luke Farmer of The Wildlands Conservancy looked on. “I had never heard of coho being in the Russian Gulch in recent memory,” said Hines, a ranger with the group. … ” Read more from the Mercury News (gift article).
BAY AREA
Bay Area weather: No rain is forecast through Christmas. Is it time to worry about drought?
“An atmospheric river came roaring off the Pacific Ocean Monday, bringing heavy rain and days of expected downpours. But it only hit Washington and Oregon, missing California entirely. After a promising, soaking start to the winter season with multiple storms in mid-November, the Golden State suddenly is coming up dry. Umbrellas have given way to sunny skies, with no end in sight. Through Monday, the Bay Area has received no rain for 18 days in a row since a quarter-inch fell on Nov. 20. And the long-range forecast is showing more of the same: another 16 days of dry conditions continuing through at least Christmas Eve. If that plays out, the Bay Area would have 34 days in a row of dry weather — making it the seventh-longest dry spell starting in November or December in recorded history back to the Gold Rush in 1849. The last time there were more consecutive dry days during the start of winter was in 2014, during California’s withering five-year drought. Before that, it was in 1989 and 1976. … ” Read more from the San Jose Mercury News (gift article).
CENTRAL COAST
Monterey One Water launches food waste receiving and co-digestion program
“Monterey One Water, Monterey, California, hosted a ribbon cutting ceremony Dec. 2 to celebrate the launch of its food waste receiving and co-digestion program at its Marina, California, facility. The project converts food scraps into renewable energy and is expected to divert up to 51,000 tons of organic waste annually. Burlington, Ontario-based Anaergia Inc. partnered with Monterey One Water to provide and modify anaerobic digestion technology at the facility. The modifications now allow Monterey One Water to receive and co-digest food waste in existing digesters used to process wastewater biosolids, resulting in the production of more biogas, which can be used in linear generators or converted into renewable natural gas (RNG). … ” Read more from Waste Today.
4,000 gallons of oil and toxic wastewater spilled near San Ardo Oil Field
“4,000 gallons of oil and toxic wastewater spilled from a pipeline in the San Ardo Oil Field on Friday, according to a Hazardous Materials Spill Report from the Governor’s Office Emergency Services. According to the report, around 6:30 a.m., 96 barrels of “produced fluid” consisting of a mixture of oil and processing water was released from an eight-inch line pipe near Sargent Creek. The flow of the pipe was shut down after the spill was reported and no injuries or evacuations were reported. The cause of the spill is still unknown. A crew is working on site to make repairs to the affected pipeline and cleanup is underway on the impacted soil surrounding the spill site. … ” Read more from the Monterey Herald.
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY
What’s stranger than fiction? That’s easy, California water politics & greater Manteca area water issues.
Dennis Wyatt, editor of the Manteca Bulletin, writes, “If Jed Clampett was shooting at some food back in 1991 on Stewart Tract and not in the Missouri Ozarks and hit the ground instead, what would have come bubbling up wouldn’t have been oil. Instead of black gold, it would have been “California gold”, a reference to the value of having a secure source of water today in the Golden State. Striking an “artesian well,” so to speak, on Stewart’s Tract would have been more like fool’s gold. Confused? Welcome to the wacky and bizarre world of California water where the old line “whiskey is for drinking; water is for fighting” is virtually the state motto. … ” Read more from the Manteca Bulletin.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Postcard from California: The ‘literal dumpster fire’ burning under an LA suburb
“In a canyon 40 miles north of downtown Los Angeles, a fire is smoldering. Unlike the forest fires that erupt every year in Southern California, this fire is 30 feet underground. It’s been spewing toxic gases for three years, with no end in sight. Chiquita Canyon, near the upper-middle-class suburb of Castaic in the Santa Clarita Valley, is the site of a 639-acre landfill owned by Waste Connections Inc., the third-largest waste management company in the US. It opened in 1972, and was the No. 2 dumping ground for Los Angeles County waste until it was forced to close at the end of last year. The cause of the fire – technically, a combustive chemical reaction Waste Connections prefers to call an “elevated temperature event” – is unknown. When it was first detected in 2022, it covered 30 acres but has since tripled in size. State Assemblywoman Pilar Schiavo, who represents the area, said in October that state regulators have told her it could burn for “two decades at least.” … ” Read more from The New Lede.
A restored reef brings fish habitat back to Southern California
“If you’ve stood on the bluffs of the Palos Verdes Peninsula and gazed out at the Pacific, you might never guess at the transformation happening beneath the waves. In 2020, as part of an effort to restore an area impacted by historical chemical pollution, divers and scientists lowered more than 70,000 tons of rock onto the ocean floor in carefully engineered mounds. Their goal: restore the rocky reef habitat that fish, kelp, and countless marine creatures need to survive, in an area long-contaminated with DDT and other toxins, and buried by sediment. Today, that effort is paying off in ways that even the scientists didn’t fully expect. … ” Read more from NOAA Fisheries.
SAN DIEGO
Nano-bubble pilot project in Tijuana River called ‘a waste of money’ after equipment swept away during storm
“The International Boundary and Water Commission has acknowledged that its heavily criticized $2.5 million “nano-bubble” project in the Tijuana River was destroyed and swept away during a recent storm. On September 9, the IBWC launched the controversial technology, hoping it would clean up sewage and chemical contamination in the Tijuana River, where daily readings of gases such as hydrogen sulfide are detected. Critics, including several politicians, scientists and environmental groups, have said the method has not been proven effective or safe for humans. “It’s reckless to do this in the middle of a vulnerable community,” said Kim Prather, an atmospheric chemist at Scripps Institution of Oceanography. “I can’t believe they would do that without ever having run the test; they were going to just do it in the middle of the community, no one was going to know.” … ” Read more from the Border Report.
Along the Colorado River …
‘Very unfair’: Trump threatens extra 5% tariff on Mexico over water dispute
“Donald Trump has threatened to impose an additional 5% tariff on Mexico if it does not immediately provide additional water to help US farmers, accusing the country of violating a treaty that outlines water-sharing between the neighbors. Under the treaty, which dates back to 1944, Mexico must send 1.75m acre-feet of water to the US from the Rio Grande through a network of interconnected dams and reservoirs every five years. The agreement also stipulates that the United States must annually allocate 1.5m acre-feet of water from the Colorado River to Mexico. The water from the Rio Grande is used to support agriculture in Texas and other US border states. … ” Read more from The Guardian.
SEE ALSO: Trump slaps Mexico with 5 percent tariff over violations of water treaty, from Al Jazeera
Utah approves more money for farmers to save water and send it downstream
“More money is headed to farmers in the Colorado River Basin, paying them to not grow as many crops and send the water they save downstream. During a special meeting on Monday, the Colorado River Authority of Utah’s board voted to approve almost $895,000 in funds to some agriculture producers under the “Demand Management Pilot Program.” It is estimated the funds would save as much as 2,500-acre feet of water. This is the second year of the program, which has spent nearly $5 million total. “Add them all up, it’d just be under 20,000 acre feet of conserved, consumptive use,” Marc Stilson, an engineer with the authority, said during a presentation on the program. … ” Read more from Fox 26.
In national water news today …
EPA erases references to human-caused climate change from websites
“EPA has scrubbed references to people’s contribution to rising temperatures from some of its climate change webpages. The agency modified sections of its website by deleting information about human-created greenhouse gases and the role they play in warming the planet. It also removed links to scientific data and information. The website now directs visitors to a subsection on climate “causes” that mentions only natural phenomena as the drivers of warming, like changes in the Earth’s orbit and variations in solar activity. Two subsections titled “Climate Change Indicators” and “Climate Change Impacts and Analysis” have been removed. An image of the agency’s “climate causes” website that was captured on Oct. 8, before it was changed, by the web archival site Wayback Machine, showed that it listed both human-induced and natural causes of warming with an emphasis on man-made emissions. … ” Read more from E&E News.
A look at precipitation water year to date …





