From MDPI -Water, Volume 13, Issue 20 (October-2 2021) - 143 articles.
If you cannot access or read the articles below click here.
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From MDPI -Water, Volume 13, Issue 20 (October-2 2021) - 143 articles.
If you cannot access or read the articles below click here.
Posted on Saturday, 23 October 2021 at 12:22 AM in Climate Change, Climate & Meteorology, Groundwater and Hydrogeology, Policy, Planning, Governance, IWRM & Management, Potpourri, Readings, Journals, Videos, Films & Visuals, World Water | Permalink | Comments (0)
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Cartoon from raymondsbrain.
Enjoy!
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The links below represent the week's water news as represented by my Tweets. I do not pretend that this survey is a comprehensive survey of the water news; it's my attempt to keep my readers informed to the best of my ability and available time.
Scroll down to 'Positions Open' and 'Previous Weeks' Positions Open' to see the jobs. All my individual job Tweets are archived at #JobWaWi. Previous weekly summaries are archived at: #WaWiNews or click here. If a link does not work, paste the URL into your browser.
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Top Twenty-Five (More or Less)
From @AP: Washington farmer fined $304K over alleged water theft during drought. https://bit.ly/3ptU8Tg #PNWater cc: @EcologyWA
In @USATODAY by @janetwilson66 : Climate Point - 22 October 2021. Quiet deaths in extreme heat. And fall color could brown out. More! https://bit.ly/3E6GhGp #globalwater #NEWater
From @OSUCEOAS: 'On the Horizon' Newsletter - 22 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3pATEue #PNWater #EUGwater #PDXwater
CRS Report: 'Carbon Capture and Sequestration (CCS) in the United States' Updated: 18 October 2021 https://bit.ly/30P9HKS #NEWater
In @AGU_Eos: New Report Puts the Amazon Rain Forest on the Main Stage at COP26 https://bit.ly/3G7dWSd #globalwater
In @AGU_Eos: Tree Rings Reveal a 700-Year Record of Flooding in Bangladesh https://bit.ly/3E5yI2x #globalwater
From @AGU_Eos: 'Buzz' Newsletter - 22 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3b0uHAb #globalwater
From @AZWRRC: 'Weekly Wave' Newssletter - 22 October 2021. In This Issue: After the Fire, WRRC Presentation, APW, Agricultural Conservation, EPA-BOSC. Reflections: Meaning of Indigenous Water Resilience. More! #SWUSwater https://conta.cc/3nd5iIY
From @WFAE: Unchecked growth of industrial animal farms spurs long fight for environmental justice in Eastern NC https://tinyurl.com/4avvc3jw #NEWater
CRS Legal Sidebar: What’s Next for WOTUS - Recent Litigation and Next Steps in Redefining “Waters of the United States”https://bit.ly/3ncUQRV
In @TheAtlantic: What Even Counts as Science Writing Anymore? The pandemic made it clear that science touches everything, and everything touches science. https://bit.ly/3pgVGzI #scicomm
In @csmonitor: Untaming a river: The stakes behind America’s largest dam removal - Klamath River. https://bit.ly/3C1RdEK
Free version in its entirety! (tnx @ProfessorJepson): Op-Ed in @dallasnews by@H2OWonk: If you think the Texas electrical grid is fragile, take a look at our #txwater infrastructure. https://bit.ly/3DQqmMe #SWUSwater
Elaine J. Hanford's Bulletin Boards: 1) Geoscience; 2) Environmental Science; 3) Coastal Zone Management - 18 October 2021 https://bit.ly/3n7vzs9
Paper: 'Parsing Weather Variability and Wildfire Effects on the Post-Fire Changes in Daily Stream Flows: A Quantile-Based Statistical Approach and Its Application' http://bitly.com/2XkXr3p #PNWater
AWWA Letter to @Radhika: Comment on @EPA's Preliminary Effluent Limit Guidelines Plan 15 https://bit.ly/2YVQ2bE
From @aspenpubradio: Talking about demand management and how to leave more water in the Colorado River https://bit.ly/3aM60r9 #cowater #SWUSwater
From @jfleck: What might planning for an 11 million acre foot or 10 million acre foot Colorado River look like? https://bit.ly/3phK0N5 #cowater #SWUSwater
From @jfleck: check out 'Future of the Colorado River Project'
@CNRUSU here: https://bit.ly/3aCy1AW
Sad to report death (12 October 2021) of Dr. C. Mark Dunning,former @AWRAHQ President who spent 31 years @USACEHQ & IWR. More: https://bit.ly/3BXEjHG
The @ScienceBorealis Newsletter - 15 Oct 2021. On the Borealis Blog; What We're Reading; Miscellany; @raymondsbrain; More! https://bit.ly/2YVp17Q
In @chronline: Washington @GovInslee, Sen. @PattyMurray Want Answers on How to Replace Benefits of Lower Snake River Dams. https://bit.ly/3piY09c #IDwater #PNWater
From @KSLcom A tiny minnow, a big pipeline and a growing water demand https://bit.ly/3aMfe6K #SWUSwater
From @KRDONewsRadio: La Niña is about to take the Southwest drought from bad to worse. https://bit.ly/2YSpiZ2
From @World_Waters: The Renaissance Dam and the Question of Water Rights on the Nile River. https://bit.ly/3DRH6mt #globalwater
It's @Water_MDPI, Vol 13, Issue 20 (October-2 2021) - 143 Articles https://bit.ly/3b9xk2p #globalwater #cdnwater
Books, Reviews and Related
G. Tracy Mehan III Reviews Books by Nordhaus and Yergin: Are Green Taxes the Answer to Pollution? https://bit.ly/3j00xkW
Bottled Water, Beer, Drinking Water/TapWater
CRS Legal Sidebar: What’s Next for WOTUS - Recent Litigation and Next Steps in Redefining “Waters of the United States”https://bit.ly/3ncUQRV
AWWA Letter to @Radhika: Comment on @EPA's Preliminary Effluent Limit Guidelines Plan 15 https://bit.ly/2YVQ2bE
Bullshit and Crap Detection
From @USATODAY: Billionaire Marc Lore outlines how he will build the inclusive, Utopian desert city Telosa. Wonder if he's seen Paolo Soleri's Arcosanti in AZ? https://bit.ly/3FVnYG0 #SWUSwater #cowater
California
From @WRVO Satellites reveal the secrets of water-guzzling farms in California. https://tinyurl.com/cvb34s39 #cawater
In @LABJnews: @Cadiz_Inc Shares Plunge as Company Reconfigures Water Transfer Plan (tnx @Sammy_Roth) https://bit.ly/3vppoDu #cawater
Canada
From @CanadianWater: 'The Droplet' Newsletter - 18 October 2021. Education and Outreach: Let’s Talk About Water; Eleven interns graduate from drinking water internship program; More! https://bit.ly/3vlM8V4 #cdnwater #globalwater
The @ScienceBorealis Newsletter - 15 Oct 2021. On the Borealis Blog; What We're Reading; Miscellany; @raymondsbrain; More! https://bit.ly/2YVp17Q
Climate, Climate Change, and Meteorology
CRS Report: 'Carbon Capture and Sequestration (CCS) in the United States' Updated: 18 October 2021 https://bit.ly/30P9HKS #NEWater
In @AGU_Eos: New Report Puts the Amazon Rain Forest on the Main Stage at COP26 https://bit.ly/3G7dWSd #globalwater
In @csmonitor: Meet the team shaking up climate models https://bit.ly/2Y4UzUT #globalwater
Colorado
From @jfleck: What might planning for an 11 million acre foot or 10 million acre foot Colorado River look like? https://bit.ly/3phK0N5 #cowater #SWUSwater
From @aspenpubradio: Talking about demand management and how to leave more water in the Colorado River https://bit.ly/3aM60r9 #cowater #SWUSwater
From @USATODAY: Billionaire Marc Lore outlines how he will build the inclusive, Utopian desert city Telosa. Wonder if he's seen Paolo Soleri's Arcosanti in AZ? https://bit.ly/3FVnYG0 #SWUSwater #cowater
From @jfleck: check out 'Future of the Colorado River Project' @CNRUSU here: https://bit.ly/3aCy1AW
From @GlenwoodPI: Streamflows in southern half of upper Colorado River basin declining faster https://bit.ly/3DToT83 #cowater
Conferences,Webinars, Workshops and Calls for Abstracts/Paper
In @AGU_Eos: New Report Puts the Amazon Rain Forest on the Main Stage at COP26 https://bit.ly/3G7dWSd #globalwater
Today is @AWRAHQ's #WebinarWednesday: 'Keystone Conflict: Beaver History,Hydrology, Ecology, Wildfires & Modern Challenges' by @OregonState's @josiah_shaver,20 Oct., 10-11 AM PT https://bit.ly/3uvbnnG
Conflict, Cooperation, and Security
Opinion in @NapaRegister: Our water security as a whole, not as a part. https://tinyurl.com/2nskyu66 #cawater
From @CECweb: On 29 October join us for the #JPAC Public Forum on Sustainable Management of Transboundary Waters! 11:00am-12:45pm ET. Register now: https://bit.ly/3aT3MWY More info: https://bit.ly/3FYJcTi
Disasters: Droughts, Floods, Wildfires and More
From @AP: Washington farmer fined $304K over alleged water theft during drought. https://bit.ly/3ptU8Tg #PNWater cc: @EcologyWA
In @AGU_Eos: Tree Rings Reveal a 700-Year Record of Flooding in Bangladesh https://bit.ly/3E5yI2x #globalwater
In @pbpost: Fewer 'sunny day' flooding events this fall, but November's new moon may bring a king tide. https://tinyurl.com/3fpu8z87 #FLwater
Paper: 'Parsing Weather Variability and Wildfire Effects on the Post-Fire Changes in Daily Stream Flows: A Quantile-Based Statistical Approach and Its Application' http://bitly.com/2XkXr3p #PNWater
From @KRDONewsRadio: La Niña is about to take the Southwest drought from bad to worse. https://bit.ly/2YSpiZ2
Daily Water Newsletters
California Water Daily
California Water News Daily - 22 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3m6o8SV #cawater
California Water News Daily - 21 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3C4OXwv #cawater
California Water News Daily - 20 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3G1hF3A #cawater
California Water News Daily - 19 October 2021. https://tinyurl.com/4peujvpf #cawater
California Water News Daily - 18 October https://bit.ly/3n8qbVE #cawater
California Water News Daily - 17 October 2021. https://bit.ly/30BnMeM #cawater
California Water News Daily - 16 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3BOj6jp #cawater
Colorado Water Daily
Colorado Water News Daily - 22 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3psDymp #cowater
Colorado Water News Daily - 21 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3b1TPGx #cowater
Colorado Water News Daily - 20 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3vtiUDP #cowater
Colorado Water News Daily - 19 October 2021. https://tinyurl.com/4wk9w882 #cowater
Colorado Water News Daily - 18 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3AQLn7B #cowater
Colorado Water News Daily - 17 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3mZ3vr7 #cowater
Colorado Water News Daily - 16 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3vl6Jcb #cowater
Florida Water Daily
Florida Water News Daily - 22 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3vB0EbG #FLwater
Florida Water News Daily - 21 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3m0PoSP #FLwater
Florida Water News Daily - 20 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3aXqEo2 #FLwater
Florida Water News Daily - 19 October 2021. https://tinyurl.com/nykuw2ud #FLwater
Florida Water News Daily - 18 October 2021. https://bit.ly/2XowpYN #FLwater
Florida Water News Daily - 17 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3DLXWmw #FLwater
Florida Water News Daily - 16 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3AOcEHK #FLwater
Idaho Water News Daily
Idaho Water News Daily - 22 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3Gc9CB5 #IDwater
Idaho Water News Daily - 21 October 2021. https://bit.ly/2ZalQcZ #IDwater
Idaho Water News Daily - 20 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3nhZmPg #IDwater
Idaho Water News Daily - 19 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3BWfsny #IDwater
Idaho Water News Daily - 18 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3BUtXZa #IDwater
Idaho Water News Daily - 17 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3DTgaTl #IDwater
Idaho Water News Daily - 16 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3BOjEpj #IDwater
Northeast US Water Daily
Northeast US Water Daily - 22 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3vD0eBq #NEWater
Northeast US Water News Daily - 21 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3aZMrLT #NEWater
Northeast US Water News Daily - 20 October 2021. https://bit.ly/2ZcygAW #NEWater
Northeast US Water News Daily - 19 October 2021. https://tinyurl.com/4rnsf86e #NEWater
Northeast US Water News Daily - 18 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3BU0AGm #NEWater
Northeast US Water News Daily - 17 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3pbJJes #NEWater
Northeast US Water News Daily - 16 October 2021. https://bit.ly/2Xj1RaS #NEWater
Pacific Northwest Water Daily
Pacific Northwest Water News Daily - 22 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3jthxQO #PNWater
Pacific Northwest Water News Daily - 21 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3C5txzc #PNWater
Pacific Northwest Water News Daily - 20 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3aRZGhP #PNWater
Pacific Northwest Water News Daily - 19 October 2021. https://tinyurl.com/yhfuu63b #PNWater
Pacific Northwest Water News Daily - 18 October 2021. https://tinyurl.com/27pejstf #PNWater
Pacific Northwest News Daily - 17 October 2021. https://bit.ly/2Z10nTz #PNWater
Pacific Northwest Water Daily - 16 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3mZCDqL #PNWater
Portland (OR) Water News Daily
Portland (OR) Water News Daily - 22 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3m7k9Wm #PDXwater
Portland (OR) Water News Daily - 21 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3E3926L #PDXwater
Portland (OR) Water News Daily - 20 October 2021. https://bit.ly/2Z8Tmjn #PDXwater
Portland (OR) Water News Daily - 19 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3vpE6KY #PDXwater
Portland (OR) Water News Daily - 18 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3aOkoyZ #PDXwater
Portland (OR) Water News Daily - 17 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3DJyZbk #PDXwater
Portland (OR) Water News Daily - 16 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3aLkCac #PDXwater
Eugene Water News Weekly - 18 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3DPaZUk #EUGwater
Southwest US Water Daily
Southwest US Water News Daily - 22 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3poKNvP #SWUSwater
Southwest US Water News Daily - 21 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3pmKEZO #SWUSwater
Southwest US Water News Daily - 20 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3lZ1Cex #SWUSwater
Southwest US Water News Daily - 19 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3lV6amg #SWUSwater
Southwest US Water News Daily - 18 October 2021. https://bit.ly/2Z5TXm7 #SWUSwater
Southwest US Water News Daily - 17 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3aLy3qz #SWUSwater
Southwest US Water News Daily - 16 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3aKY6y0 #SWUSwater
Texas Water Daily
Texas Water News Daily - 22 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3nnLVxf #txwater
Texas Water News Daily - 21 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3aY32zR #txwater
Texas Water News Daily - 20 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3vwN493 #txwater
Texas Water News Daily - 19 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3DSIwwQ #txwater
E-Newsletters and E-Newspapers
The @WaterNetwork1 Newsletter - 22 October 2021. Essential Industry Trending Technology~Editor's Choice~Articles & Knowledge Exchange~Featured Jobs~Online Course~Events~More! https://bit.ly/3nmn9x9 #globalwater
In @USATODAY by @janetwilson66 : Climate Point - 22 October 2021. Quiet deaths in extreme heat. And fall color could brown out. More! https://bit.ly/3E6GhGp #globalwater #NEWater
From @OSUCEOAS: 'On the Horizon' Newsletter - 22 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3pATEue #PNWater #EUGwater #PDXwater
From @AZWRRC: 'Weekly Wave' Newssletter - 22 October 2021. In This Issue: After the Fire, WRRC Presentation, APW, Agricultural Conservation, EPA-BOSC. Reflections: Meaning of Indigenous Water Resilience. More! #SWUSwater https://conta.cc/3nd5iIY
From @AGU_Eos: 'Buzz' Newsletter - 22 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3b0uHAb #globalwater
Elaine J. Hanford's Bulletin Boards: 1) Geoscience; 2) Environmental Science; 3) Coastal Zone Management - 18 October 2021 https://bit.ly/3n7vzs9
From @CanadianWater: 'The Droplet' Newsletter - 18 October 2021. Education and Outreach: Let’s Talk About Water; Eleven interns graduate from drinking water internship program; More! https://bit.ly/3vlM8V4 #cdnwater #globalwater
The @ScienceBorealis Newsletter - 15 Oct 2021. On the Borealis Blog; What We're Reading; Miscellany; @raymondsbrain; More! https://bit.ly/2YVp17Q
Ethics, Gender, Indigenous People, Rights
From @WFAE: Unchecked growth of industrial animal farms spurs long fight for environmental justice in Eastern NC https://tinyurl.com/4avvc3jw #NEWater
Florida Water
In @pbpost: Fewer 'sunny day' flooding events this fall, but November's new moon may bring a king tide. https://tinyurl.com/3fpu8z87 #FLwater
Global Water
In @USATODAY by @janetwilson66 : Climate Point - 22 October 2021. Quiet deaths in extreme heat. And fall color could brown out. More! https://bit.ly/3E6GhGp #globalwater #NEWater
In @AGU_Eos: New Report Puts the Amazon Rain Forest on the Main Stage at COP26 https://bit.ly/3G7dWSd #globalwater
In @AGU_Eos: Tree Rings Reveal a 700-Year Record of Flooding in Bangladesh https://bit.ly/3E5yI2x #globalwater
In @csmonitor: Meet the team shaking up climate models https://bit.ly/2Y4UzUT #globalwater
Elaine J. Hanford's Bulletin Boards: 1) Geoscience; 2) Environmental Science; 3) Coastal Zone Management - 18 October 2021 https://bit.ly/3n7vzs9
From @CanadianWater: 'The Droplet' Newsletter - 18 October 2021. Education and Outreach: Let’s Talk About Water; Eleven interns graduate from drinking water internship program; More! https://bit.ly/3vlM8V4 #cdnwater #globalwater
Paper: 'Parsing Weather Variability and Wildfire Effects on the Post-Fire Changes in Daily Stream Flows: A Quantile-Based Statistical Approach and Its Application' http://bitly.com/2XkXr3p #PNWater
From @World_Waters: The Renaissance Dam and the Question of Water Rights on the Nile River. https://bit.ly/3DRH6mt #globalwater
It's @Water_MDPI, Vol 13, Issue 20 (October-2 2021) - 143 Articles https://bit.ly/3b9xk2p #globalwater #cdnwater
Groundwater and Hydrogeology
In @capitalpress: Flood Irrigation Forever: Farmers provide crucial habitat for migratory waterfowl, recharge aquifer. https://bit.ly/3b8tWVv #IDwater
Hydrofracking, Shale Gas, and Energy
CRS Report: 'Carbon Capture and Sequestration (CCS) in the United States' Updated: 18 October 2021 https://bit.ly/30P9HKS #NEWater
NE Water #NEWater
From @WFAE: Unchecked growth of industrial animal farms spurs long fight for environmental justice in Eastern NC https://tinyurl.com/4avvc3jw #NEWater
Personal, People, Interviews, and Quotes
"Science touches everything, and everything touches science." - Ed Yong, in @TheAtlantic
"When the student is ready the teacher will appear." - Buddhist/Tao Te Ching/Zen proverb
"What’s the use of having developed a science well enough to make predictions if, in the end, all we’re willing to do is stand around and wait for them to come true?" - F. Sherwood Rowland
"Think before you speak. Read before you think." - @FranLebowitzQ
Amen! "Name another time when you'd rather be alive...I can't think of one." - @jonstewart (on @jaketappper on @CNN)
"How can you look at the Texas legislature and still believe in intelligent design?" - Kinky Friedman
“Speak when you are angry, and you’ll make the best speech you’ll ever regret.” - Laurence J. Peter
"The economy is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the environment." - Gaylord Nelson (former governor and senator from Wisconsin and founder of Earth Day)
Sad to report death (12 October 2021) of Dr. C. Mark Dunning,former @AWRAHQ President who spent 31 years @USACEHQ & IWR. More: https://bit.ly/3BXEjHG
"We have no idea how they did this" - US official, after China launches its first hypersonic missile
PNW Water
From @AP: Washington farmer fined $304K over alleged water theft during drought. https://bit.ly/3ptU8Tg #PNWater cc: @EcologyWA
In @lewistontribune: WA @GovInslee, @SenMurray to ponder future without dams. They will fast-track research into replacing services provided by four lower Snake River dams, in case of breaching https://bit.ly/2Xhp8Ke #PNWater #IDwater
In @capitalpress: Flood Irrigation Forever: Farmers provide crucial habitat for migratory waterfowl, recharge aquifer. https://bit.ly/3b8tWVv #PNWwater
From @OSUCEOAS: 'On the Horizon' Newsletter - 22 October 2021. https://bit.ly/3pATEue #PNWater #EUGwater #PDXwater
In @csmonitor: Untaming a river: The stakes behind America’s largest dam removal - Klamath River. https://bit.ly/3C1RdEK
Paper: 'Parsing Weather Variability and Wildfire Effects on the Post-Fire Changes in Daily Stream Flows: A Quantile-Based Statistical Approach and Its Application' http://bitly.com/2XkXr3p #PNWater
In @chronline: Washington @GovInslee, Sen. @PattyMurray Want Answers on How to Replace Benefits of Lower Snake River Dams. https://bit.ly/3piY09c #IDwater #PNWater
Policy, Planning, Law, Governance, Economics, IWRM, and Management
CRS Legal Sidebar: What’s Next for WOTUS - Recent Litigation and Next Steps in Redefining “Waters of the United States”https://bit.ly/3ncUQRV
CRS Report: 'Carbon Capture and Sequestration (CCS) in the United States' Updated: 18 October 2021 https://bit.ly/30P9HKS #NEWater
From @aspenpubradio: Talking about demand management and how to leave more water in the Colorado River https://bit.ly/3aM60r9 #cowater #SWUSwater
From @bcreview: Mistrust surrounds proposed project - Boulder City would forgo return flow credits... https://bit.ly/30zYCx9 #SWUSwater
Positions Open #JobWaWi
Josh's Water Jobs and More! - 19 October 2021 https://bit.ly/3jejalo
Check out jobs @ @OregonState's Water Resources Graduate Program https://oregonstate.edu/gradwater/jobs #JobWaWi
Check out @WaterDistJobs! https://waterdistrictjobs.com #JobWaWi
For the latest @TVAjobs Employment opportunities visit https://tva.me/4mRN6k #JobWaWi
Amazing resource! Follow @joshswaterjobs and visit his website: https://www.joshswaterjobs.com #JobWaWi
Check out @FLWaterDaily #FLwater jobs! https://tinyurl.com/jpffgoh #JobWaWi
Positions: @CA_DWR - Various locations and types: enviro science, geology, engineering, restoration, etc.https://bit.ly/1XaG4sw #JobWaWi
Positions: @SeaGrant - Various positions across the USA. Updated regularly. https://1.usa.gov/1SYL5RQ #JobWaWi
@BCWaterNews Jobs Click 'View Jobs' at https://bcwaterjobs.com
@EcologyWA - Current Openings - Updated every few days https://1.usa.gov/1evxlPd
Current Positions: @NYCDEP (New York City & environs) - Various. https://tinyurl.com/zoq6jqc
Positions (many): @nature_org - Various locations and duties. https://jobs.nature.org/jobs/ #JobWaWi
Previous Weeks' Positions Open #JobWaWi
Josh's Water Jobs and More! - 12 October 2021 https://bit.ly/3mQgtYe
Josh's Water Jobs and More! - 5 October 2021 https://bit.ly/3osX2ae
Previous Weekly Water Summaries - Go To #WaWiNews
TGIF! Weekly Water News Summary 16 - 22 October 2021 https://bit.ly/3Ga3dq2
TGIF! Weekly Water News Summary 9 - 15 October 2021 https://bit.ly/3FV0ktg
TGIF! Weekly Water News Summary 2-8 October 2021 https://bit.ly/3mxxeqE
TGIF! Weekly Water News Summary 25 September - 1 October 2021 https://bit.ly/3a3MZ2Z
TGIF! Weekly Water News Summary 18 - 24 September 2021 https://bit.ly/3i6CgJw
TGIF! Weekly Water News Summary 11 - 17 September 2021 https://bit.ly/2XsAgUZ
TGIF! Weekly Water News Summary 4 - 10 September 2021 https://bit.ly/3z2Ol83
TGIF! Weekly Water News Summary 21 August - 3 September 2021 https://bit.ly/2WPVBr4
TGIF! Weekly Water News Summary 14 - 20 August 2021 https://bit.ly/2UAULgx
TGIF! Weekly Water News Summary 7 - 13 August 2021 https://bit.ly/2UfEWf4
TGIF! Weekly Water News Summary 31 July - 6 August 2021 https://bit.ly/3lF3OIo
TGIF! Weekly Water News Summary 24-30 July 2021 https://bit.ly/2VpvGFe
TGIF! Weekly Water News Summary 17 - 23 July 2021 https://bit.ly/3BzE7hT
TGIF! Weekly Water News Summary 10 - 16 July 2021 https://bit.ly/2UjN2U
Reports, Publications, and Journals
CRS Report: 'Carbon Capture and Sequestration (CCS) in the United States' Updated: 18 October 2021 https://bit.ly/30P9HKS #NEWater
Paper: 'Parsing Weather Variability and Wildfire Effects on the Post-Fire Changes in Daily Stream Flows: A Quantile-Based Statistical Approach and Its Application' http://bitly.com/2XkXr3p #PNWater
It's @Water_MDPI, Vol 13, Issue 20 (October-2 2021) - 143 Articles https://bit.ly/3b9xk2p #globalwater #cdnwater
Science, Medicine, Health, and Technology
In @TheAtlantic: What Even Counts as Science Writing Anymore? The pandemic made it clear that science touches everything, and everything touches science. https://bit.ly/3pgVGzI #scicomm
Elaine J. Hanford's Bulletin Boards: 1) Geoscience; 2) Environmental Science; 3) Coastal Zone Management - 18 October 2021 https://bit.ly/3n7vzs9
Southwest Water #SWUSwater
From @AZWRRC: 'Weekly Wave' Newssletter - 22 October 2021. In This Issue: After the Fire, WRRC Presentation, APW, Agricultural Conservation, EPA-BOSC. Reflections: Meaning of Indigenous Water Resilience. More! #SWUSwater https://conta.cc/3nd5iIY
From @jfleck: What might planning for an 11 million acre foot or 10 million acre foot Colorado River look like? https://bit.ly/3phK0N5 #cowater #SWUSwater
From @jfleck: check out 'Future of the Colorado River Project'
@CNRUSU here: https://bit.ly/3aCy1AW
From @KSLcom A tiny minnow, a big pipeline and a growing water demand https://bit.ly/3aMfe6K #SWUSwater
From @aspenpubradio: Talking about demand management and how to leave more water in the Colorado River https://bit.ly/3aM60r9 #cowater #SWUSwater
From @KRDONewsRadio: La Niña is about to take the Southwest drought from bad to worse. https://bit.ly/2YSpiZ2
From @bcreview: Mistrust surrounds proposed project - Boulder City would forgo return flow credits... https://bit.ly/30zYCx9 #SWUSwater
Streams, Wetlands, Dams, Lakes, and Ecosystems
In @capitalpress: Flood Irrigation Forever: Farmers provide crucial habitat for migratory waterfowl, recharge aquifer. https://bit.ly/3b8tWVv #PNWwater
In @csmonitor: Untaming a river: The stakes behind America’s largest dam removal - Klamath River. https://bit.ly/3C1RdEK
From @aspenpubradio: Talking about demand management and how to leave more water in the Colorado River https://bit.ly/3aM60r9 #cowater #SWUSwater
From @GlenwoodPI: Streamflows in southern half of upper Colorado River basin declining faster https://bit.ly/3DToT83 #cowater
In @chronline: Washington @GovInslee, Sen. @PattyMurray Want Answers on How to Replace Benefits of Lower Snake River Dams. https://bit.ly/3piY09c #IDwater #PNWater
In @lewistontribune: WA @GovInslee, @SenMurray to ponder future without dams. They will fast-track research into replacing services provided by four lower Snake River dams, in case of breaching https://bit.ly/2Xhp8Ke #PNWater #IDwater
From @World_Waters: The Renaissance Dam and the Question of Water Rights on the Nile River. https://bit.ly/3DRH6mt #globalwater
Texas #txwater
Free version in its entirety! (tnx @ProfessorJepson): Op-Ed in @dallasnews by@H2OWonk: If you think the Texas electrical grid is fragile, take a look at our #txwater infrastructure. https://bit.ly/3DQqmMe #SWUSwater
From @epheraldpost: Haunted Water? One @EPWater employee shares his paranormal encounters. https://bit.ly/3jdkNja #txwater
Visuals, Audios, Podcasts and Infographics
Via @kpvi: ‘Salmon Reckoning’ documentary investigates Congressman Simpson’s plan to save salmon, breach Snake River dams. https://bit.ly/3n7qyjF #IDwater #PNWater
Film: 'Rewilding a Mountain' https://bit.ly/3FwBAHn #PNWater
Water/Land Quality and Contamination
CRS Legal Sidebar: What’s Next for WOTUS - Recent Litigation and Next Steps in Redefining “Waters of the United States”https://bit.ly/3ncUQRV
AWWA Letter to @Radhika: Comment on @EPA's Preliminary Effluent Limit Guidelines Plan 15 https://bit.ly/2YVQ2bE
Water Supply, Quantity, Reuse, Conservation, Infrastructure
From @WRVO Satellites reveal the secrets of water-guzzling farms in California. https://tinyurl.com/cvb34s39 #cawater
Free version in its entirety! (tnx @ProfessorJepson): Op-Ed in @dallasnews by@H2OWonk: If you think the Texas electrical grid is fragile, take a look at our #txwater infrastructure. https://bit.ly/3DQqmMe #SWUSwater
In @LABJnews: @Cadiz_Inc Shares Plunge as Company Reconfigures Water Transfer Plan (tnx @Sammy_Roth) https://bit.ly/3vppoDu #cawater
From @KSLcom A tiny minnow, a big pipeline and a growing water demand https://bit.ly/3aMfe6K #SWUSwater
WTF?
From @epheraldpost: Haunted Water? One @EPWater employee shares his paranormal encounters. https://bit.ly/3jdkNja #txwater
"An ill-chosen word is the fool's messenger." - Unknown
Posted on Friday, 22 October 2021 at 04:28 PM in Blogs, Twitters, WWW sites, e-Newsletters, & Lists, Tweets Galore It's Friday!, World Water | Permalink | Comments (0)
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Angela C. Jones and Ashley J. Lawson have updated (18 October 2021) this CRS report: 'Carbon Capture and Sequestration (CCS) in the United States'.
Download CRS_Report_CCS_USA_18Oct2021
Click on the graphics to enlarge them.
Summary
Carbon capture and storage (or sequestration)—known as CCS—is a process that involves capturing man-made carbon dioxide (CO2) at its source and storing it permanently underground. CCS could reduce the amount of CO2—an important greenhouse gas—emitted to the atmosphere from the burning of fossil fuels at power plants and other large industrial facilities. The concept of carbon utilization has also gained interest within Congress and in the private sector as a means for capturing CO2 and converting it into potentially commercially viable products, such as chemicals, fuels, cements, and plastics, thereby reducing emissions to the atmosphere and helping offset the cost of CO2 capture (CCS is sometimes referred to as CCUS—carbon capture, utilization, and storage). Direct air capture is a related and emerging technology designed to remove atmospheric CO2 directly.
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has funded research and development (R&D) in aspects of CCS since at least 1997 within its Fossil Energy and Carbon Management Research, Development, Demonstration, and Deployment program (FECM) portfolio. Since FY2010, Congress has provided $7.3 billion in appropriations for DOE CCS-related activities, including annual increases in recent years. In FY2021, Congress provided $750 million to FECM, of which $228.3 million was directed to CCUS.
Worldwide, according to the Global CCS Institute, 24 facilities capturing and injecting CO2 facilities were operational in 2020, 12 of which are in the United States. U.S. facilities capturing and injecting CO2, and projects under development, operate in five industry sectors: chemical production, hydrogen production, fertilizer production, natural gas processing, and power generation. These facilities capture and inject CO2 with the aim to sequester the CO2 in underground geologic formations or use the CO2 to increase oil production from aging oil fields, known as enhanced oil recovery (EOR). The Petra Nova project in Texas was the first and only U.S. fossil-fueled power plant generating electricity and capturing CO2 in large quantities (over 1 million tons per year) until CCS operations were suspended in 2020.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), under authorities to protect underground sources of drinking water, regulates CO2 injection through its Underground Injection Control (UIC) program and associated regulations. While the agency establishes minimum standards and criteria for UIC programs, most states have the responsibility for regulating and permitting wells injecting CO2 for EOR (classified as Class II recovery wells).
Congress has incentivized development of CCS projects through creation of the Internal Revenue Code Section 45Q tax credit for carbon sequestration or its use as a tertiary injectant for EOR or other designated purposes. Recent Internal Revenue Service guidance and regulations on this tax credit are intended to provide increased certainty for industry by establishing processes and standards for “secure geologic storage of CO2,” among other requirements.
The Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 (P.L. 116-260) included several provisions aimed at supporting CCS project development in the United States. The act revised and expanded DOE’s ongoing CCS research, development, and demonstration activities, established expedited federal permitting eligibility for CO2 pipelines (where applicable), and extended the start-of-construction deadline for facilities eligible for the Section 45Q tax credit, among other provisions.
There is broad agreement that costs for CCS would need to decrease before the technologies could be widely deployed across the nation. In the view of many proponents, greater CCS deployment is fundamental to reduce CO2 emissions (or reduce the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere) and to help mitigate human-induced climate change. Congress may also consider that some stakeholders do not support CCS as a mitigation option, citing concerns with continued fossil fuel combustion and the uncertainties of long-term underground CO2 storage.
Skipping to the discussion...
Discussion
In recent Congresses, proposed and enacted CCS-related legislation has addressed federal CCS RD&D activities and funding, CO2 pipelines, and the carbon sequestration tax credit. More than55 bills were introduced in the 116th Congress that contained provisions addressing CCS. Some of these bills, or provisions thereof, were enacted as part of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 (P.L. 116-260). Potential implementation and oversight issues related to these provisions might be of interest in the 117th Congress. In 2021, the Biden Administration has announced climate change mitigation goals and strategies, and new climate-focused groups and initiatives that may also be of interest when considering CCS-related oversight, appropriations, or legislation.
In the 116th Congress, as part of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 (P.L. 116-260), Congress reauthorized the DOE CCS research program. Among other provisions, the law expanded the scope of DOE’s research to noncoal applications (e.g., natural gas-fired power plants, other industrial facilities). The law also authorized a DOE carbon utilization research program and specific activities related to direct air capture (e.g., a DAC technology prize). As is also true for other DOE applied research programs, some criticize such activities as an inappropriate role for government, arguing the private sector is better suited to develop technologies that can compete in the marketplace.
Costs have been, and remain, a key challenge to CCS development in the United States. In recent years, Congress has attempted to address this challenge in two main ways—federal R&D and federal tax credits. P.L. 116-260 also extended the start of construction deadline for facilities claiming the 45Q tax credit. The tax credit is considered by some stakeholders as one of the strongest policies supporting CCS in the world. In January 2021, the IRS promulgated regulations establishing requirements for carbon storage under Section 45Q. Congress remains interested in the efficacy of the tax credit in promoting CCS development and could consider additional adjustments to it.
The issue of expanded CCS deployment is closely tied to the issue of reducing greenhouse gas emissions to mitigate human-induced climate change. In two January 2021 executive orders, President Biden outlined new federal climate policies; created new White House and Department of Justice climate offices; and established new task forces, workgroups, and advisory committees on climate change science and policy. At this early stage, the implications of these executive branch policies and actions on CCS project development and deployments are unclear.
An additional consideration in the congressional policy discussion is that not all advocates for actions to address climate change support CCS technology.83 Some argue that CCS supports continued reliance on fossil fuels, which runs counter to reducing greenhouse gas emissions and other environmental goals. They tend to prefer policies that phase out the use of fossil fuels altogether. Other CCS opponents raise concerns about the long-term safety and environmental uncertainties of injecting large volumes of CO2 underground.
Enjoy!
"Science touches everything, and everything touches science." - Ed Yong, in @TheAtlantic
Posted on Thursday, 21 October 2021 at 08:55 PM in Climate Change, Climate & Meteorology, CRS, FMSO & GAO Reports, Energy & Water, Groundwater and Hydrogeology, Wastewater, Stormwater & Infrastructure | Permalink | Comments (0)
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From Kate R. Bowers - the latest (7 October 2021) CRS report on you-know-what: What’s Next for WOTUS - Recent Litigation and Next Steps in Redefining “Waters of the United States”. This Legal Sidebar (LSB) present s distictly legal perspective and has embedded links that may not be present it the dowloaded version, so you maye to wish to read it by clicking on the title ablve
I like to think we will get WOTUS figured out in my lifetime (NOT!).
Download CRS_LSB_Next_Steps_WOTUS_7Oct2021
Introduction
On September 3, 2021, the Army Corps of Engineers (Corps) and the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced that they halted implementation of the Navigable Waters Protection Rule, which defined “waters of the United States” (WOTUS) for purposes of establishing the scope of Clean Water Act (CWA) jurisdiction. The announcement followed a federal district court decision on August 30 in Pasqua Yaqui Tribe v. EPA, in which the court remanded and vacated the rule. Although the agencies had requested that the court allow implementation of the rule while they developed a new definition of WOTUS through the rulemaking process, the court instead agreed with parties challenging the rule who argued that it should be vacated immediately. The court’s vacatur of the Trump-era Navigable Waters Protection Rule requires the Corps and EPA revert to an older regulatory definition while the Biden Administration undertakes its rulemaking process to redefine WOTUS.This Sidebar discusses recent developments in the litigation surrounding the Corps and EPA’s efforts to define WOTUS. A companion CRS Report provides more in-depth discussion of the actions taken by the Obama, Trump, and Biden Administrations to define WOTUS, along with related legislation and case law.
Overview of Agency Efforts to Define WOTUS
The CWA prohibits discharging certain pollutants into “the waters of the United States, including the territorial seas” without a permit. The statute does not define “waters of the United States,” however. Congress, the courts, stakeholders, and the Corps and EPA—the two agencies responsible for administering the CWA—have long debated how to interpret the term, and thus the scope of waters that are federally regulated.
Prior to 2015, regulations promulgated by the Corps in 1986 and EPA in 1988 were in effect. The Corps and EPA also issued guidance in 2003 and 2008 to clarify the scope of CWA. Several Supreme Court decisions, most notably Rapanos v. United States in 2006, prompted the agencies to consider changes that would clarify the scope of WOTUS.” In 2015, the Corps and EPA issued the Clean Water Rule, which redefined WOTUS in the agencies’ regulations for the first time since the 1980s. Under both the 2015 Clean Water Rule and the pre-2015 regulatory framework, the agencies’ jurisdictional analysis sorted waters into three categories: (1) waters and wetlands that are categorically WOTUS; (2) waters and wetlands that may be deemed WOTUS on a case-by-case basis upon a finding of a “significant nexus” with traditionally navigable waters; and (3) waters and wetlands that are categorically excluded from WOTUS. Among other things, the 2015 Clean Water Rule also defined the regulatory term “tributaries” for the first time, and established numerical distance-based criteria for determining when waters and wetlands were jurisdictional by virtue of their adjacency to certain regulated waters.
The 2015 Clean Water Rule was quickly mired in litigation. At the time President Trump took office in 2017, the rule had been stayed by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. After the Supreme Court held that the Sixth Circuit did not have jurisdiction to enter that order because challenges to the rule must be litigated in federal district courts, the Sixth Circuit lifted its stay and the rule became effective in states that were not subject to one of several preliminary injunctions issued at the district court level. By that point, however, the Trump Administration had already begun its efforts to repeal the 2015 Clean Water Rule and replace it with a new definition of WOTUS.
On February 28, 2017, President Trump issued an executive order (E.O. 13778) directing the Corps and EPA to review and rescind or revise the 2015 Clean Water Rule. The agencies then embarked on a two-step regulatory process. First, the agencies repealed the 2015 Clean Water Rule and recodified the pre- 2015 regulatory text. Then, on April 21, 2020, the agencies issued the Navigable Waters Protection Rule. Overall, the Navigable Waters Protection Rule narrowed the definition of WOTUS, and thus the scope of waters and wetlands under federal jurisdiction. Among other changes, the rule (1) eliminated the category of waters whose jurisdictional status would be determined on a case-by-case basis, and the classification of all waters as either categorically included or categorically excluded; (2) excluded ephemeral features (i.e., those that flow or pool only in direct response to precipitation), including ephemeral tributaries, and features that did not provide surface water flow in a “typical year” to jurisdictional waters; (3) more narrowly defined “tributaries” and “adjacent wetlands,” both of which continued to be considered jurisdictional; and (4) removed interstate waters as a separate category of jurisdictional waters.
Enjoy!
"When the student is ready the teacher will appear." - Buddhist/Tao Te Ching/Zen proverb
Posted on Wednesday, 20 October 2021 at 11:09 AM in Bottled Water and Tap/Drinking Water, Conflict, Cooperation, Vulnerability & Security, CRS, FMSO & GAO Reports, Law & Economics, Policy, Planning, Governance, IWRM & Management, WaSH, Water Quality, Health & Ecosystems | Permalink | Comments (0)
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Last Thursday, we released Episode 03 of the Diving into Water and Sanitation Careers where I have a great discussion with Deepesh Jain, a young professional currently working for MSF in Sierra Leone. You can listen or watch the podcast here on various platforms.
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0 - 2 years
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5 - 9 years
57) Director, Global Food and Water Policy – The Nature Conservancy (TNC) (Washington, D.C., USA): Until filled
58) International Environmental Specialist (Nature-Based Solutions) – International Centre for Environmental Management (ICEM) (Hanoi, Vietnam): 30 October
59) Manager (Urban Water) – World Resources Institute (WRI)(India): Until filled
60) Water Governance Programs Manager Lebanon – WeWorld-GVC(Zahlé, Lebanon): 4 November
61) Natural Resources Officer (Climate Change and Sustainability) – United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) (Budapest, Hungary): 29 October
62) Environmental Economist – The World Bank (Washington, D.C., USA): 29 October
63) Environmental Manager – The Ocean Cleanup (Rotterdam, Netherlands): 20 October
64) Technical Specialist (Environmental (Climate Change)) - Maternity Cover – United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS)(Bonn, Germany/Home-based): 31 October
65) Energy and Environment Technical Working Group Coordinator – United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) (Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh): 24 October
66) Project Coordinator (Climate Change and Climate Adaptation Fund) – Caribbean Development Bank (Saint-Michael, Barbados): 29 October
67) Portuguese speakers: Angola Government Relations Advisor – The Nature Conservancy (TNC) (Luanda, Angola): 15 November
68) Local recruitment: Policy Advisor (Monitoring, Evaluation, and Learning for Adaptation to Climate Change) – International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) (Geneva, Switzerland): 29 October
69) Program Manager/Associate (Water Security) – Raintree Foundation (Pune, Maharashtra, India): Until filled
70) Technical Expert WASCA – Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) (Delhi, India): 31 October
71) Local recruitment: Water Programs Delivery Manager – Glenelg Hopkins Catchment Management Authority (Hamilton VIC, Australia): 29 October
72) Knowledge Mobilization Specialist – University of Saskatchewan(Saskatoon, SK, Canada): Until filled
73) Local recruitment: Project Manager – Ag Innovations(Sebastopol, CA, USA): Until filled
74) Project Director (NatureVest) – The Nature Conservancy (TNC)(USA/Home-based): Until filled
75) Project Manager (Water Program) – The Nature Conservancy (TNC) (Sacramento, CA, USA): 8 November
76) Director of Land and Water Management – The Nature Conservancy (TNC) (Lansing, Michigan, USA): 11 November
77) Climate Adaptation and Resilience Specialist (International Development Division) – Abt Associates (Rockville, MD, USA): 31 October
78) Local recruitment: Communications Lead – Future Earth (Home-based in the USA): 1 November
79) Local recruitment: Director of Strategic Partnerships – Earthwatch (USA/Home-based): Until filled
80) Water Resources Manager l – New Mexico Office of the State Engineer (Las Cruces, NM, USA): Until filled
81) Restoration Ecologist – The Nature Conservancy (TNC) (Toledo, OH, USA): 29 October
82) Chief of Party for the Regional Water and Vulnerable Environment (WAVE) activity – Tetra Tech (Kazakhstan): Until filled
83) Principal Water Resources Professional – DHI (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia): 29 October
84) Chief Science Officer – African Union (AU) (Addis Ababa, Ethiopia): 1 November
85) Global Climate Adaptation Director – The Nature Conservancy (TNC) (All locations will be considered where TNC has an already established office): Until filled
86) Chief of Party – AECOM (Chelmsford, MA, USA): Until filled
87) Senior Programme Management Officer – United Nations Environment Programme (UN Environment) (Nairobi, Kenya): 28 October
88) Team Leader (Ocean Prediction and Monitoring) – Pacific Community (SPC) (Suva, Fiji): 1 November
89) Team Leader (Ocean Management and Literacy) – Pacific Community (SPC) (Suva, Fiji): 1 November
90) Associate Director (Freshwater) – Jacobs (Southampton, UK): Until filled
91) Local recruitment: Fluvial Hydraulics and Geomorphology Specialist – Government of Alberta (Edmonton, AB, Canada): 1 November
92) U.S. nationals: Principal Energy & Water Advisor – Concurrent Technologies Corporation (CTC) (Home-based): Until filled
93) Environmental Scientist 5 – New York State Office of the Attorney General (Albany, NY, USA/Home-based): 5 December
94) Senior Scientist (Hydrology) and Academic Liaison – IBSS(Home-based): Until filled
Not Specified
95) Senior Technical Spec. (SECAP) – International Fund for Agriculture (IFAD) (Kenya): 26 October
96) Executive Director – Nexus for Development (Phnom Penh, Cambodia): 1 November
97) German speakers: Berater*in für die Themen Gewässerschutz und Wassernutzergruppen – Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) (Lusaka, Zambia): 31 October
98) German speakers: Modeling of Dynamic Water Demands in Urban Crisis Situations – DLR (German Aerospace Center) (Germany): Until filled
99) German speakers: Junior-Berater*in Climate Support Programme in Südafrika – Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) (Pretoria, South Africa): 1 November
100) French speakers: Consultant for Water Management (f/m/d), Sub-Sahara, Africa – AGIAMONDO (Germany): 31 October
101) See job eligibility requirements: Scientist to work on machine learning for environmental modelling – European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) (Reading, UK or Bonn, Germany): 1 November
102) Head of Department for Climate Adaptation and Integrated Water Management – Ramboll (Copenhagen, Denmark): 15 November
103) Danish speakers: Groundwater expert for infrastructure projects – Ramboll (Aarhus, Denmark): 25 October
104) Local recruitment: Policy Advisor (Water) – Waikato Regional Council (WRC) (Hamilton, New Zealand): 24 October
105) Australian/New Zealand Citizen nationals and Local recruitment: Groundwater Hydrologist – The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) (Various, Australia): 31 October
106) Local recruitment: Water Resource Officer – Government of New South Wales (New South Wales, Australia): 25 October
107) Local recruitment: Senior Water Resources Officer – Government of New South Wales (New South Wales, Australia): 25 October
108) Australian/New Zealand Citizen nationals and Local recruitment: Groundwater Hydrologist – The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) (Various, Australia): 31 October
109) Specialist (Water Projects) – Rio Tinto (Perth WA, Australia): Until filled
110) Local recruitment: Policy Officer – Chandler McLeod (Canberra ACT, Australia): Until filled
111) Local recruitment: Water Licensing Officer – Government of South Australia (Mount Gambier SA, Australia): 26 October
112) Local recruitment: Water Regulation Officer – Government of New South Wales (New South Wales, Australia): 28 October
113) Australia nationals: Research Program Manager (Water) – Government of Australia (Canberra ACT, Australia): 28 October
114) Local recruitment: Senior Engagement Officer – Government of South Australia (Adelaide SA, Australia): 27 October
115) Local recruitment: Senior Data Analyst – Government of New South Wales (Sydney NSW, Australia): 31 October
116) Local recruitment: Water Officer – Queensland Government(Brisbane QLD, Australia): 1 November
117) Local recruitment: Manager Climate Adapted and Water Sensitive City – City of Melbourne (Melbourne VIC, Australia): 27 October
118) Local recruitment: Project Officer (Fixed-Term) – RSPB (Lake Vyrnwy, Oswestry, UK): 20 October
119) Local recruitment: Water Adviser – National Trust (United Kingdom): 24 October
120) Local recruitment: Geomorphology Advisor – Natural Resources Wales (Wales, UK): 31 October
121) Local recruitment: Flood Hydrology Improvement Programme Stakeholder and Engagement Specialist – Environment Agency(United Kingdom): 31 October
122) Managing Consultant, Environmental Impact Accounting – South Pole (London, UK): Until filled
123) Hydrogeologist / Senior Hydrogeologist – Mott MacDonald(United Kingdom): Until filled
124) Technical Director Hydrological Sciences – Stantec(Birmingham, UK): Until filled
125) Local recruitment: Catchment Co-ordinator – Environment Agency (Worthing, UK): 26 October
126) Local recruitment: Upstream Thinking Project Officer – Westcountry Rivers Trust (WRT) (United Kingdom/Home-based): 27 October
127) Local recruitment: Technical Policy Advisor (Water) – Northumbrian Water (Durham, UK): 31 October
128) Local recruitment: Senior Water Resources Planner – Environment Agency (United Kingdom): 31 October
129) Local recruitment: Assistant River Kent Project Officer – Freshwater Biological Association (Far Sawrey, Ambleside, UK): 31 October
130) Local recruitment: Project Officer for EU LIFE R4Ever Kent Project – South Cumbria River Trust (Low Wood, Ulverston, UK): 31 October
131) See job eligibility requirements: Grade 7 - 25 Year Environment Plan Evaluation Lead – U.K. Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) (United Kingdom): 31 October
132) U.S. nationals: Hydrologist – U.S. Geological Survey (USGS)(Richmond, VA or Charleston, WV, USA): 22 October
133) Watershed Coordinator – Utah Department of Agriculture and Food (Richfield, UT, USA): 24 October
134) Engineering Manager – Idaho Department of Environmental Quality (Twin Falls, ID, USA): Until filled
135) Water Resources Management Specialist – Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (La Crosse, WI, USA): 24 October
136) U.S. nationals: Hydrologic Technician – U.S. Bureau of Land Management (Various, OR, USA): 29 October
137) U.S. nationals: Hydrologist – National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) (Tuscaloosa, AL, USA): 26 October
168) Research Fellow (Indigenous Water) – Monash University(Clayton VIC, Australia): 28 October
169) Research Fellow (RISE) – Monash University (Melbourne VIC, Australia): 20 October
170) Freshwater Ecologist – NIWA (Christchurch, New Zealand): 27 October
171) REACH Communications and Knowledge Exchange Manager (Maternity Cover) – University of Oxford (Oxford, UK): 29 October
172) Researcher in surface hydrology – Uppsala University (Uppsala, Sweden): 29 October
173) French speakers: H/F: Geological and ecological factors determining cholera epidemics in the African Rift Valley – Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS) (Besançon, France): 2 November
174) Research Position to Simulate Riverine Temperature and Nitrate Concentration – Cooperative Institute for Satellite Earth System Studies (CISESS) (College Park, MD, USA): 27 October
175) Pakistan nationals: Senior Research Officer (Water and Climate Policy) – International Water Management Institute (IWMI) (Lahore, Pakistan): 27 October
176) Pakistan nationals: Senior Research Officer (Gender and Social Inclusion) – International Water Management Institute (IWMI)(Lahore, Pakistan): 27 October
177) Local recruitment: Research Scientist (Agro-Hydrologist) – Government of Canada (Brandon, MB, Canada): 20 October
178) Greek speakers: Director – Institute of Marine Biological Resources and Inland Waters (IMBRIW) (Athens, Greece): 1 November
179) Course Associate (Water Resources and Climate) (Spring 2022) – Columbia University (New York, NY, USA): Until filled
180) One-year part-time Research Assistant (Chesapeake Bay Watershed Initiative) – Franklin & Marshall College (Lancaster, PA, USA): Until filled
181) Seasonal Hydrological Econometric forecasting for hydropower optimization (SHE) + Econometric Analysis of High Dimensional Network Structures in Macroeconomics and Finance (EHDMF) – Libera Università di Bolzano (Italy): 29 October
3) Additional Resources
Congressional Research Service Positions
Check out @AidJobs - Vacancies in aid, development, humanitarian & nonprofit sector (volunteers, consultants or F-T employment) https://aidjobs.org
UN Jobs in Water and Sanitation
@BCWaterNews Jobs Click View Jobs
@EcologyWA - Current Openings - Updated every few days. Click here.
King County (WA)Jobs
Academic Jobs in Schools of Physical/Earth Sciences
Mac's List - Jobs in Portland and Beyond!
New Zealand Hydrological Society Jobs Board
Association of Oregon Counties Job Postings
Soil Science Societies Career Center
AGU Career Center for research/academic jobs
GoodWorkCanada - Canada's Green Jobs Site
How to Find Work Overseas, with Marcelle Yeager. https://bit.ly/1pIopLT
For the full list of Josh's active water jobs, please visit www.joshswaterjobs.com/jobs
Enjoy!
"The pandemic made it clear that science touches everything, and everything touches science." - Ed Yong, from The Atlantic
Posted on Tuesday, 19 October 2021 at 12:54 AM in Education, Josh Newton's Water Jobs & More!, Opportunities & Positions, World Water | Permalink | Comments (0)
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