What kind of plant is “Santolina”?
The devil is in the details as Albuquerque and Bernalillo County grapple with the unfamiliar process and scale of Santolina.
The devil is in the details as Albuquerque and Bernalillo County grapple with the unfamiliar process and scale of Santolina.
Geez it’s depressing watching the legislature. It’s never pretty. Bismarck supposedly said those who like sausages and laws shouldn’t watch either being made. And Dios sabe we’re all used to how ugly DC looks. But somehow, in New Mexico, you expect more humanity, more empathy, when the human issue is laid on the table. Sure, there will be different ideas of how to solve problems, but people will be more likely to understand them in terms of what it means to be a human trying to make it through the day.
But this pack of Republicans, I dunno…
A report back from the 21st annual statewide New Mexico Water Dialogue meeting and thoughts on an inclusive governance strategy for our water's future.
Action research and social science missing in identifying real stakeholders and impacts.
As the aquifer gets increasingly strained, in New Mexico and beyond, Mike Agar explores the concept of aquifer recharge and storage.
El Agua Es Vida, takes the visitor on an historical ride through Nuevomexicano rural communities from the arrival of the Spanish to the current crises caused by the pull of outside wage labor, demands for their water rights, and climate change.
Mike Agar explores local water conundrums at the annual meeting of the Society of Applied Anthropology.
The 20th annual statewide meeting of The New Mexico Water Dialogue stressed the importance and value of communication synergy in light of the state's water sharing conundrums.
Is the most recent state water planning initiative a Quixotic undertaking? Mike Agar explores the possibilities beyond the windmills.
The possibilities and pitfalls of water desalination are being explored at a research center in Alamogordo.