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Podcasts Take Two
Dept. of Interior releases grim report on sustainability of Colorado River
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Dec 13, 2012
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Dept. of Interior releases grim report on sustainability of Colorado River
Yesterday, the federal government released the results of a three-year study on the Colorado River, a water source critical to Nevada, California and elsewhere.The picture it paints is grim: demand is growing and supply is dwindling, and within 50 years the situation will be unsustainable.
Aerial views of the Colorado River, Imperial Valley, 6 August 2009.
Aerial views of the Colorado River, Imperial Valley, 6 August 2009.
(
Brent Stirton/Getty Images
)

Yesterday, the federal government released the results of a three-year study on the Colorado River, a water source critical to Nevada, California and elsewhere.The picture it paints is grim: demand is growing and supply is dwindling, and within 50 years the situation will be unsustainable.

Yesterday, the federal government released the results of a three-year study on the Colorado River, a water source critical to Nevada, California and elsewhere.

The picture it paints is grim: demand is growing and supply is dwindling, and within 50 years the situation will be unsustainable.

Professor Jay Famiglietti, a hydrologist at UC Irvine and the director of the UC Center for Hydrolic Modeling joins the show to talk about the implications of the report.

Colorado River Basin Water Supply & Demand Study Final Study Reports