jfleck at inkstain

A few thoughts from John Fleck, a writer of journalism and other things, living in New Mexico

Where Are They Getting the Water?

Every time we drove through a new subdivision on the edge of Albuquerque, my Dad used to ask the same question: “Where are they getting the water?” Tony Davis had a story in the Arizona Daily Star recently that showed the depth to which Arizona has failed to grapple with that question, essentially allowing subdivisions [...]

The Cap and Trade Struggle

My colleague Sean Olson had a story last weekend that captured the struggle facing those trying to implement state-level cap and trade regulations in New Mexico (sub/ad req): Republicans and many Democrats agree that a state cap-and-trade system would be a form of economic suicide for New Mexico. New Mexico is a member of the [...]

Colorado has a new interbasin transfer idea

A bunch of Colorado and Wyoming municipal water utilities apparently hope to gang up on entrepreneur Aaron Million, hatching a pipeline scheme of their own to pipe water across the continental divide to growing front range cities. From Bobby Magill at the Coloradan: Move over, Aaron Million. A coalition of municipal water suppliers from the [...]

Meet at the Bellagio fountains?

Any western water wonks in the audience headed to Vegas in April for the  Implications of Lower Lake Levels Symposium? Leave a comment or email me, and maybe we can meet up at the Bellagio fountains and crack wise.

On Moving Water: The Exclusion Problem

I’ve written in the past about the importance of the notion of moving water from where it wants to be. A lot of our problems seem to happen when we do that, because water wants to be where it wants to be, and its powerful urges are difficult to resist. My past discussions have focused [...]

Scientization: Delta Smelt, a Case Study

Friday’s release of the National Academy study on pumping restrictions in the California Bay-Delta system on behalf of endangered fish offers a great case study in “scientization,” the process by which competing political factions repurpose scientific findings to meet their political needs. The panel concluded that the pumping restrictions are scientifically justified, a blow for [...]

’70s Cooling Myth Paper Grows Legs

I am happy to report that a paper I helped write, The Myth of the 1970s Global Cooling Scientific Consensus, has been included in McGraw Hill Annual Editions Environment 10/11, a collection used as an undergraduate environmental and earth science reader. (Full disclosure: the series editor, Zach Sharp, is a friend.)

Zigs and Zags on the Path to Lower Carbon Energy

A lot of the discussion about the new “Bloom Energy Server,” which is having its 15 minutes of fame, is of the binary “is it or isn’t it” flavor. David Douglas has a more nuanced view of the way in which what happened here is an example of the sort of path forward me might [...]

Stuff I Wrote Elsewhere: ABQ Water Consumption Declining

Albuquerque’s per capita water consumption continues to drop (sub/ad req): Albuquerque Bernalillo County Water Utility Authority customers used an average of 159 gallons per capita per day in 2009, down from 252 gallons in 1994, when the community’s water conservation efforts began, according to Katherine Yuhas, head of the utility’s water conservation program. Yuhas and [...]

Confusing metaphorical warfare with policy substance

Matthew Nisbet, in Slate today, gives thoughtful voice to my growing frustration with the way my friends in the science community have been approaching the climate politics and policy discussion of late: The problems begin when scientists overestimate the influence of climate skeptics and their corporate backers. When legislation and international treaties fail, and polls [...]

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