Day: December 8, 2025
Romancing the River: Why am I āRomancingā It? — George Sibley (SibleysRivers.com) #ColoradoRiver #COriver #aridification

Click the link to read the article on the Sibley’s Rivers website (George Sibley:
December 2, 2025
Negotiations among the Magnificent Seven representing the seven states of the Colorado River region begin to resemble the ongoing negotiations between the military and diplomatic representatives for North and South Korea, where negotiations for something beyond an armistice have been going on for more than sixty years. Here, as there, the negotiations have reached a stalemate, and both sides are now engaged in an information war. Between the two Koreas, this war takes the form of everything from huge arrays of speakers blasting pop music across the demilitarized zone to smuggled USB drives with movies and TV shows. Here, it is mostly just propaganda bombs tossed over our āDMZ,ā the Grand Canyons, about each sideās virtue and the other sideās obstinacy, depending on their regional mediaās love of conflict and tendency to support the home team. The missed November deadline has been seamlessly replaced ā as we all suspected it would be ā by a February deadline. But otherwise ā nothing new on that front. We can just hope it doesnāt go on for another fortysome years.
So Iām going to take advantage of the stalemate to ask the reader to think about a bigger picture that may be more interesting. It stems from a comment from my partner Maryo, from whom I learn too much to dismiss anything she says. āWhy are you āromancing the riverā?ā she asked the other day. āRomance is such a cheapened concept today ā bodice-ripping stories of ridiculous antagonistic love. Youāre undermining the value of your work, calling it a āromance.āā
āWell,ā I said ā figuring that if she feels that way, maybe my readers raise the same question ā āmaybe one of the things a writer ought to try to do is restore the value of words and the concepts they once represented that have become devalued through misuse.ā Spoken like a true Don Quixote, another old man who took arms, sort of, against abuse of the concept of āromance.ā
I do think that one of the things that ācivilizationā does in civilizing us is to simplify things for us, including words whose complexity and depth embrace concepts, ideas and feelings that can be inconvenient to an orderly civilized society. A āromance,ā from the medieval era on into the early 20th century, was a story of an adventure in pursuit of something mysterious, exciting, challenging, something beyond everyday life. That could be the pursuit of a love relationship that was life-changing (and maybe life-endangering) for its participants ā Tristan and Isolde, Launcelot and Guinevere, Romeo and Juliet, Bonnie and Clyde.
But on a much larger scale, the romantic adventure can be establishing a relationship with anything outside of ourselves that intrigues or challenges us. The relationship can emerge with a place, a house, a horse, a car, a continent, a river, an idea, as well as another person, anything that intrigues us, wakes up our imagination ā arational or prerational relationships that make the civilizing forces nervous. The relationship can run the quick dynamic spectrum from arational love to its flip side arational hate, through all the intermediary love-hate variations. It can also have a mythically selective or even creative attitude toward the gray-zone relationship between ātruthā and fact. Which leads those trying to develop an orderly civilization to dismiss anything (ad)venturing into the mythic as a lie. It just seems simpler that way.
The first comprehensive study of the Colorado River region was uncivilized enough to state upfront its romantic origins: Frederick Dellenbaughās Romance of the Colorado River. Dellenbaughās book (available online for a pittance) delved as deeply as was possible at that time into both the First People prehistory in the region and the early history of the Euro-American invasion, from the Spanish trying to work their way up the river from its contentious confluence with the Gulf of California (āSea of Cortezā to them) to the trappers imposing the first major Euro-American change on the river, stripping its tributaries of their beavers which increased the size and violence of the riverās annual spring-summer runoff of snowmelt. But the heart of the book is John Wesley Powellās explorations to link the upper river and the lower river through its canyons.
Dellenbaugh, as a seventeen-year-old, accompanied Powell on his second Colorado River expedition, a ābaptism under waterā (often literally) that shaped his āromanticā vision. In his āIntroduction,ā after observing that most of the great rivers that humans encountered in exploration and settlement gradually became like foster parents to those who settled along them, carrying goods for them and generally watering and growing their settlements, he says of the Colorado:
Dellenbaughās Romance was published in 1903. That same year, another great southwestern writer, Mary Hunter Austin came out with her Land of Little Rain, a fascinating collection of her explorations in the deserts of the lower Colorado River region. In that book she offered what might be a cautionary note about āromancing the river,ā in an observation about a small Arizona tributary of the Colorado River, āthe fabled Hassayampa⦠of whose waters, if any drink, they can no more see fact as naked fact, but all radiant with the color of romance.ā
I will now indulge my tendency to take a ātectonicā look at history ā looking for large chunks colliding or grating together or subducting under each other. I see the history of our engagement with the Colorado River dividing into three ātectonic romancesā: first, the Romance of Exploration, which is chronicled in a couple different ways by those two explorers, Dellenbaugh and Austin; their 1903 publications summarize that age and put a semi-colon at the end of the period, as it were.
Second, the Romance of Reclamation: 1903 also marks the year the U.S. Reclamation Service came into being, an organization created almost specifically for settling the Colorado River deserts. Civilized people on both sides of the question would deny that there was any āromanceā to reclamation, but one early Bureau engineer would publicly disagree, writing in 1918 about āthe romance of reclamationā:
C.J. Blanchard of the U.S. Reclamation Service authored that steaming verdure. The Service at that time was under the U.S. Geological Survey, a scientific organization disciplined to the ālook before you leapā methods of science, discerning the reality of a situation and adapting to that; but the Reclamation Service, frustrated by the seasonal flood-to-trickle flows of the Colorado, thought that changing that reality (through storage and redistribution) was a more promising route than adapting to it, and so was on its way to becoming independent of the USGS when Blanchard wrote his āromance of irrigationā for an educational journal called The Mentor(thanks, Dave Primus, for calling it to my attention).

CREDIT: COLORADO STATE UNIVERSITY WATER RESOURCES ARCHIVE via Aspen Journalism
The best-known document of the Romance of Reclamation was of course the Colorado River Compact ā a document in which the romance of reclamation overrode any relationship to ānaked factā about the river and its flows, a situation that is now biting our collective ass. Yet an Arizona water maven said recently that any Bureau of Reclamation solution to the seven-state impasse would have to cleave closely to the Compactā¦. The history of the Romance of Reclamation has been written in the gaggle of Congressional acts, court decisions, treaties, regulations and directives that make up the āLaw of the Riverā (recitations of which never seem to include the 1908 Winters Doctrine allocating assumed water to federal reservations, including to the First Peoples).
The end of the Romance of Reclamation would be in the 1960s, pick your date: publication of Rachel Carsonās Silent Spring in 1962, passage of the Wilderness Act in 1964, passage of the Environmental Policy Act in 1969 ā a decade in which the general American perception of the West underwent a sea change, from seeing it as a workplace for producing the resources to feed the American people and industries, to seeing it as a great natural playground to which Americaās predominantly urban population could go to recharge, with a resulting desire to protect it from the very industrial consumption that supported the American ālifestyle.ā.
This was the dawn of the third romantic epoch in our relationship with the river (and the continent in general) ā the Romance of Restoration and Revision, driven by a belief that we have sinned against capital-N Nature ā with many naked facts as evidence ā and can only expiate our sins by preserving what remains of the nonhuman environment, restoring what we can of the damage weāve done, and revising our own systems for consuming nature (e.g., renewable energy).
Aesthetics are at the root of our romance with capital-N Nature, aesthetics best served by the (increasingly rare) opportunity to be alone with and āsilent on a peak in Darien,ā as Keats put it. We have a large (and growing) number of excellent writer[s] who work to elaborate on that aesthetic ā Ed Abbey first, Craig Childs, Heather Hansman, Kevin Fedarko, to name a few.
But the aesthetic yearning to ultimately āput it back the way it wasā does not extend to other equally naked facts, like the dependence of the outdoor recreation industries on the creation of big mountain-highway traffic jams pumping big quantities of carbon and nitrogen gases into the already overladen atmosphere, as we all load up our cars with expensive gear to go off to commune with Nature. Or the naked fact that maintaining civilization-as-we-know-it for 300 million people involves a lot of nonrewable extraction from Nature that it will be very difficult to move away from entirely ā unless we figure out how to control our breeding.
Just as significant achievements were achieved under the Romance of Reclamation, so significant achievements have been achieved under the Romance of Restoration and Revision ā the setting aside of millions of acres of still-sort-of-wild land, instream flow laws, increasingly responsible forest management, et cetera. But we are clearly still in the early transition ā half a century later ā to a more realistic romance with restoring and revising to a kinder gentler relationship with the nonhuman systems of nature. And right now, we are experiencing a major counter-attack from the societal forces whose aesthetics still imagine a āworking landscapeā of derricks, mines and other industrial-scale harvests, all suffused with the āsmell of money,ā societal forces that believe the best of times were before we woke up to the increasingly fragile finitude of our planet under the burden of us. Letās all go back and make America great again!

I cannot now imagine when and how this third epoch of our romance with the river will end. I think this aesthetic romance might peak with the ābreachingā of Glen Canyon Dam, an action that has taken on a somewhat mythic quality for todayās river romantics. I donāt think we will tear it down ā let it stand as a monument toā¦something. But I suspect that even the Bureau of Reclamation is exploring some way of tunneling around it at river level, as we continue to flirt with the disaster of dead pool behind the dam. It will not be easy, due to the silt already piled up at the dam ā but really, nothing is going to be easy anymore; that blessed civilization is now in the rear-view mirror.
Iām going to take advantage of the lull in the short-term news about the riverās management for maybe the next decade, to take a look at each of these three epochs of āromancing the riverā and their relationship to the ānaked factsā of the river ā mostly see if there might be something there weāve overlooked that might help us move forward in our ever-emerging relationship of this āFirst River of the Anthropocene.ā Onward and outward.
Federal money is still in President Trump’s limbo. Rural #Utah is antsy about its water projects — KUER

Click the link to read the article on the KUER website (David Condos). Here’s an excerpt:
December 3, 2025
Price Mayor Michael Kourianos drew an imaginary line in the air between two scrubby desert hills. His hand traced the path of a planned 100-foot dam for a new reservoir just north of the city in Carbon County. The project, which Kourianos described as vital to the areaās future, would provide irrigation to farmers and shore up the cityās water supply. Itās a big deal in a drought-prone area, and it could be built within five years, he said ā if the federal funding thatās supposed to pay for it doesnāt disappear.
āI’m very much worried about that,ā Kourianos said. āThat could be at risk. Thatās the unknown.ā
To finish the projectās environmental impact study by next spring, he said the city and county had to scrape together about $215,000. That was after they were told there were no more federal funds to help with it due to the Trump administrationās recent cuts. The next step will be designing the reservoir, which he said is supposed to be paid for by theĀ Natural Resources Conservation Service, part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The agency is set to pay 75% of construction costs, too. In all, the project will cost around $200 million. For a city of 8,216 people, thatās just not in the budget…
Priceās reservoir isnāt the only one threatened. In January, for example, the Biden administrationĀ awardedĀ more than $70 million to 10 proposals in Utah and another $50 million to four on the Navajo Nation and Ute tribal land within the stateās watersheds. The projects range from improving wetland habitat forĀ endangered fishĀ to removing invasive plants, such asĀ Russian olive trees, from riverbanks. It was part of aĀ $388.3 million effortĀ to improve drought resilience across the Colorado River Basin with money from the Inflation Reduction Act. Just a few days after the money was awarded, however, President Donald Trump took office andĀ pausedĀ it. Several months later, recipients are still waiting…One of the impacted proposals is a collaboration between theĀ Utah Division of Wildlife ResourcesĀ and conservation organizationsĀ Trout UnlimitedĀ andĀ The Nature ConservancyĀ that would pay people to voluntarily leave water in the Price River rather than use it.
New Report Warns of Critical #Climate Risks in Arab Region — Bob Berwyn (InsideClimateNews.org)

Click the link to read the article on the Inside Climate News website (Bob Berwyn):
December 4, 2025
As global warming accelerates, about 480 million people in North Africa and the Arabian Peninsula face intensifying and in some places unsurvivable heat, as well as drought, famine and the risk of mass displacement, the World Meteorological Organization warned Thursday.
The 22 Arab region countries covered in the WMOās new State of the Climate report produce about a quarter of the worldās oil, yet directly account for only 5 to 7 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions from their own territories. The climate paradox positions the region as both a linchpin of the global fossil-fuel economy and one of the most vulnerable geographic areas.
WMO Secretary-General Celeste Saulo said extreme heat is pushing communities in the region to their physical limits. Droughts show no sign of letting up in one of the worldās most water-stressed regions, but at the same time, parts of it have been devastated by record rains and flooding, she added.āHuman health, ecosystems and economies canāt cope with extended spells of more than 50 degrees Celsius. It is simply too hot to handle,ā she said.
The region in the report stretches from the Atlantic coast of West Africa to the mountains of the Levant and the deserts of the Arabian Peninsula. It spans more than 5 million square miles, roughly the area of the continental United States west of the Mississippi River. Most people live near river valleys or in coastal cities dependent on fragile water supplies, making the entire region acutely sensitive to even small shifts in temperature and rainfall.
Egyptās Nile Delta, one of the worldās lowest-lying and most densely populated coastal plains, is particularly vulnerable. The delta is sinking and regional sea levels are rising rapidly, putting about 40 million residents and more than half of the countryās agricultural output at risk.
The most recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report warns that large parts of the Nile Delta will face chronic flooding, salinized soils, and permanent inundation under nearly every future warming scenario. Some projections indicate that a third of the areaās farmland will be underwater by 2050. Because the delta is so low and flat, even modest sea-level rise will push saltwater far inland.
The new WMO report shows that the foundations of daily life across the Arab region, including farms, reservoirs and aquifers that feed and sustain millions, are being pushed to the brink by human-caused warming.
Across northwestern Africaās sun-blasted rim, the Maghreb, six years of drought have slashed wheat yields, forcing countries such as Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia to import more grain, even as global prices rise.
In parts of Morocco, reservoirs have fallen to record low levels. The government has enacted water restrictions in major cities, including limits on household use, and curtailed irrigation for farmers. Water systems in Lebanon have already crumbled under alternating floods and droughts, and in Iraq and Syria, small farmers are abandoning their land as rivers shrink and seasonal rains become unreliable.
The WMO report ranked 2024 as the hottest year ever measured in the Arab world. Summer heatwaves spread and persisted across Syria, Iraq, Jordan and Egypt. Parts of Iraq recorded six to 12 days with highs above 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees Fahrenheit),Ā conditions that are life-threatening even for healthy adults. Across the region, the report noted an increase in the number of heat-wave days in recent decades while humidity has declined. The dangerous combination speeds soil drying and crop damage.Ā

By contrast, other parts of the regionāthe United Arab Emirates, Oman and southern Saudi Arabiaāwere swamped by destructive record rains and flooding during 2024. The extremes will test the limits of adaptation, said Rola Dashti, executive secretary of the Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia, who often works with the WMO to analyze climate impacts.
Climate extremes in 2024 killed at least 300 people in the region. The impacts are hitting countries already struggling with internal conflicts, and where the damage is under-insured and under-reported. In Sudan alone, flooding damaged more than 40 percent of the countryās farmland.
But with 15 of the worldās most arid countries in the region, water scarcity is the top issue. Governments are investing in desalination, wastewater recycling and other measures to bolster water security,
but the adaptation gap between risks and readiness is still widening.
The worst is ahead, Dashti said in a WMO statement, with climate models showing a āpotential rise in average temperatures of up to 5 degrees Celsius (9 degrees Fahrenheit) by the end of the century under high-emission scenarios.ā The new report is important, she said, because it āempowers the region to prepare for tomorrowās climate realities.ā















