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Desert Sun/USA Today Exploration of Groundwater Overuse

Wins 2016 Knight-Risser Prize


knightrisser.stanford.edu /winner2016announcement.html
Pumped Dry: The Global Crisis of Vanishing Groundwater, a joint project of The Desert Sun and USA Today, has
won the 2016 Knight-Risser Prize for Western Environmental Journalism. The prize goes to Desert Sun reporter Ian
James, USA Todays Steve Elfers, a videojournalist, and Steve Reilly, a reporter and data specialist.
Special Recognition Citation
Special Recognition was given to Killing the Colorado, a five-part series by ProPublica reporter Abrahm
Lustgarten, exposing the western water crisis as the result of generations of legislative and legal decisions
influenced by greed, political cowardice and willful ignorance of basic science. The series was produced in
partnership with the online science and environment publication Matter.
The Knight-Risser Prize, which bestows a cash award of $5,000, recognizes the best environmental reporting on the
North American West from Canada through the United States to Mexico. Winners participate in the Knight-Risser
Prize Symposium, an annual environmental forum at Stanford.
More information about the symposium will be coming soon. To find out when the symposium has been announced,
please follow us on Twitter at @KnightRisser.
READ MORE ABOUT THE WINNING ENTRIES

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Steve Elfers, USA Today


Grape harvesting in Paso Robles, California, one of many regions that depend heavily on groundwater pumping for
agriculture.
Starting from California, Winning Series Spans the Globe
Supported by a team of journalists and a travel grant from the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting, James and Elfers
traveled to farms in California, Kansas, India, Peru, and Morocco. In stories, photographs and information graphics,
they identified a water crisis that exists not just in the West but across the country and the globe. Through interviews
with scientists, farmers, government officials and residents, they illustrated how the unchecked use of underground
water threatens not just current but future water supplies. The series also spawned a documentary that was shown
at film festivals in Sonoma and Palm Springs, Calif., as well as Toronto and Washington D.C.
James and his Desert Sun colleague Jay Calderon had previously won a Special Recognition in the 2014 KnightRisser Prize for a series on groundwater depletion in California . James proposed taking a wider look when NASA
satellite measurements showed aquifers threatened worldwide.
Ian James and his colleagues have been relentless in covering water issues, said Paul Rogers, resources and
environment writer for the San Jose Mercury News and managing editor of the KQED Science Unit. The Desert
Sun is doing an amazing job. Its a relatively small paper in Palm Springs, which is a community with little rainfall

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and lots of golf courses where reforms arent always embraced. Their work is informing their community and readers
around California and the nation.
Rogers was one of five journalists and environmental experts who judged the contest. The others were Meg
Caldwell, deputy director, oceans, David and Lucille Packard Foundation; Jay Hamilton, Stanford professor of
communication and director of the Stanford Journalism Program; Jim Morris, managing editor for environment and
labor at the Center for Public Integrity, and co-winner of the 2015 Knight-Risser Prize; and Patty Talahongva, a
print and television journalist, independent documentary filmmaker and former president of the Native American
Journalists Association.
Hamilton commended the series color-coded graphics showing aquifer hotspots. Rogers found the writing clear and
to the point for what can be a dense topic, and the series timely.
I was astounded at how far this reporter went Peru, Morocco, he said. Those places are the Ghost of Christmas
Future if we dont get our act together.
The severity of groundwater overdraft in global hotspots is shown here in an animated visualization of data from
NASA and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
The Desert Sun
Pumped Dry details the impacts of falling water tables in California, beneath cornfields in Kansas , rice paddies in
India, asparagus farms in Peru and orange groves in Morocco. Pumped beyond their limits, many aquifers have
declined dramatically and growing numbers of wells have gone dry. As these water reserves dwindle, the threats are
mounting for people who depend on groundwater to supply agriculture, sustain economies and provide drinking
water. Conflicts over water are on the rise and farmers are being forced to switch crops or go into debt. In some
areas, fields have turned to dust and farmers are facing unprecedented hardships.
I proposed this series to investigate the consequences of this pervasive problem and report on how its affecting
people in places around the world, James said. The project involved collaborative work by a team of journalists at
USA Today and The Desert Sun, who built on our data analysis and stories with graphics and maps illustrating areas
where aquifers are rapidly declining. Were deeply honored to have this work recognized with the Knight-Risser
Prize, and we hope the series and the documentary will continue to generate more discussion about this critically
important problem and steps that can be taken to address it.
In the United States, nearly two-thirds of the groundwater pumped from wells is used for agriculture, the rest for
cities and expanding development and industries.
In analyzing two decades of U.S. Geological Survey data, USA Today and The Desert Sun found water levels
dropping in nearly two-thirds, or 64 percent, of more than 32,000 wells across the country. The average decline was
more than 10 feet and in some areas more than 100 feet. As the drought in the West intensified from 2011 to 2014,
so did groundwater pumping .
Despite satellite evidence of this looming global crisis, the series showed, little is being done to regulate pumping or
conserve groundwater.
Climate change will only exacerbate the problem. Across the globe, people are pumping ever deeper to find water.
Theyre now tapping underground reservoirs built up over tens of thousands of years. It could take that long for
nature to replenish them.
About the Prize and the Judging
The Knight-Risser Prize will be awarded at a symposium to be held at Stanford in early 2017 . The event will bring

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together journalists, researchers, policymakers, advocates, students, and the public to explore the environmental
issues raised by the winning entry. The prize is co-sponsored by the John S. Knight Journalism Fellowships and the
Bill Lane Center for the American West at Stanford, with support from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.
READ MORE ABOUT THE WINNING ENTRIES >

The Knight-Risser Prize for Western Environmental Journalism is a joint venture of the John S. and James L.
Knight Foundation, the John S. Knight Journalism Fellowships at Stanford and the Bill Lane Center for the American
West at Stanford.
Prize Administrators and Sponsors

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