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The Alamo City facilities, owned by Microsoft and the Army Corps, have taken large amounts of water from the drought-ridden ...
Dallas investor Kyle Bass proposes a private-sector solution to Texas' looming water crisis. Lawmakers clash over legality, ...
Texas lawmakers took steps big and small to help save the state’s water supply. A big one: investing $20 billion in water projects over the next two decades.
It has become a boating, fishing and camping spot rimmed with lakeside homes. But it remains an ample source of water in an ...
Even though groundwater districts were created to regulate groundwater, the law effectively stops them from doing so, or they risk major lawsuits. The state water plan, which spells out how the ...
Legislation to bolster our state’s water supply is headed to Gov. Greg Abbott’s desk. But the final decision on the multi-billion dollar plan rests in the hands of Texas voters.
The Texas Water Fund, ushered in by the Legislature in 2023, was an important first step to ensure the state had enough resources for water development projects and funding for aging infrastructure.
That’s because of a century-old law called the rule of capture. The rule is simple: If you own the land above an aquifer in Texas, the water underneath is yours.
Rapid population growth, climate change, and aging water infrastructure all threaten the state’s water supply. Texas does not have enough water to meet demand if the state is stricken with a ...
That’s because of a century-old law called the rule of capture. The rule is simple: If you own the land above an aquifer in Texas, the water underneath is yours.