The Arizona Water Resources Research Center (WRRC) was established in 1957. Its mission is to provide statewide outreach and education focused on critical water issues affecting Arizona and to provide expertise on state and regional water management and policy. Located within the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at the University of Arizona, the WRRC administers the Federal 104 grant program authorized by the Water Resources Research Act of 1964. Related missions are to communicate water-related research needs from research users to researchers, and to report research findings to potential users of that information. The WRRC works with public/private organizations and individuals to provide information and services through outreach, conferences and symposia, and a publications program that includes two newsletters.

2005 Water Conference: Water and the Environment - Wednesday, April 6th 2005
2004 Water Conference: The Future of Agricultural Water Use in Arizona

TRIF Water Sustainability Program Grant Proposals are now being accepted. View the RFP and budget template
September/October 2004 edition of the Arizona Water Resource Newsletter is online (WSP Supplement)
Arizona Town Hall Research Report
CATTS Student Fellowship Application Deadline: November 15, 2004
104B Grant Announcement and Proposal Guidelines 2004 (PDF)
TRIF Water Sustainability Program - New Project Summaries + Project Listing 2004-2005
Presentation by Sharon Megdal: How Water Management in Tucson, Arizona Affects the Desert's Landscape
View and purchase the WRRC's Arizona Water Map/Poster
Subscribe to the WRRC's Arizona Water Resource and Arroyo publications


Project WETArizona Project WET
  • Water Education for Teachers. Provides teaching aides for grades K-12

Water CASA logo NIWR: National Institutes for Water Resources
  • National Institutes for Water Resources A gateway to 54 water resource institutes.

Water CASA logo University of Arizona: Water Sustainability
  • Provides science based technical, economic, legal, and policy expertise necessary for water development, use, and conservation in an increasingly urban state with sustained population growth.

 

Website maintained by Gabriel Leake
Send web related comments, questions, and suggestions to: gleake@email.arizona.edu
For all non-web related inquiries please contact: wrrc@cals.arizona.edu

©2003. The Arizona Board of Regents, for the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, The University of Arizona

 
 
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