Source Protection, Treatment Reliability, Contamination Pathways, Laboratory Confidence, Public-Safe Reporting, and Health-Centered Water Governance
Water quality is one of the most consequential interfaces between hydrology, infrastructure, public health, governance, and public trust. It is not only a technical measure of...
Turning Flood Hazard, Urban Drainage Stress, Wastewater Overflow, Critical Asset Exposure, and Coastal Risk Into Actionable Water-System Readiness
Flood risk is one of the most visible forms of water-system failure, but it is rarely only a flood problem. Flooding exposes...
Asset Risk, Service Reliability, Non-Revenue Water, Digital Operations, Cyber-Physical Resilience, Affordability, and Public Trust
Water utilities sit at the operational center of water security. They convert hydrology into public service. They transform source water into safe drinking water, collect and...
Source Reliability, Drought Readiness, Groundwater Stress, Allocation Governance, Demand Management, and Water-System Intelligence
Water security begins with a deceptively simple question: will the right quantity and quality of water be available, at the right time, in the right place, for...
A Clear Operating Boundary for Water-System Intelligence, Readiness, and Responsible Continuation
Water systems require authority clarity because they sit across hydrology, engineering, public health, ecology, finance, law, operations, technology, and community trust. Utilities operate systems and carry service-continuity obligations. Public...