The US Army Corps of Engineers opened two dams on Friday in Central California and let roughly 2.2 billion gallons of water flow out of reservoirs, after President Donald Trump ordered the release with the misguided intent to send water to fire-ravaged Southern California.
Trump celebrated the move in posts to Truth Social on Friday and Sunday, declaring, "the water is flowing in California," and adding the water was "heading to farmers throughout the State, and to Los Angeles."
There are two major problems, water experts said: The newly released water will not flow to Los Angeles, and it is being wasted by being released during the wet winter season.
"They were holding extra water in those reservoirs because of the risk that it would be a dry summer," said Heather Cooley, director of research for California water policy organization the Pacific Institute. "This puts agriculture at risk of insufficient water during the summer months."
On Friday, Trump posted that 1.6 billion gallons was being released adding that "in 3 days, it will be 5.2 billion gallons."
Read more at the link in @cnn's bio.
📷: Bing Guan/Bloomberg/Getty Images
Government proposals for a unified UK construction regulator mark a significant shift toward environmental sustainability in construction. By integrating safety, product standards and net zero carbon performance, policy alignment could strengthen sustainable building design and accelerate the transition to net zero carbon buildings. The move is expected to push developers toward rigorous whole life carbon assessment, transparent lifecycle assessment and greater focus on embodied carbon in materials. Yet, the diversion of National Wealth Fund and clean‑tech R&D budgets threatens investment in renewable building materials, low carbon construction materials and digital design innovations essential for achieving carbon footprint reduction.
Approval of the Five Estuaries offshore wind expansion reinforces clean power supply crucial to energy‑efficient buildings and sustainable building practices. Electrification strategies depend on a greener grid to reduce the carbon footprint of construction and advance low carbon design principles inherent in sustainable construction. Rising annual temperatures, confirmed by the Met Office, demand eco‑design for buildings resilient to overheating, flood and drought. Government flood taskforce initiatives must complement broader circular construction strategies, ensuring that adaptation spending matches increasing risk.
Exposed flaws in carbon offsetting schemes have intensified scrutiny over carbon neutral construction claims. Developers are shifting from questionable credits toward verifiable on‑site reductions through whole life carbon strategies, improved building lifecycle performance and sustainable material specification supported by environmental product declarations (EPDs). Economic realism and life cycle cost assessment are becoming central to sustainable design, ensuring that embodied carbon metrics translate into genuine impact rather than accounting artefacts.
International developments strengthen this trajectory. Legal challenges to inadequate climate action, such as in Japan, reinforce the global imperative for decarbonising the built environment. Hong Kong’s restrictions on volatile organic compounds signal emerging benchmarks for green building materials and eco‑friendly construction. Attempts to close climate research centres risk undermining data vital for BREEAM v7 certification, circular economy in construction analysis and life cycle thinking in construction. Reliable research infrastructure underpins net zero whole life carbon targets, supporting broader sustainability goals across the global built environment.
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