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Hazy Futures: Projecting the local impacts of global warming is a stubborn challenge. But cities need answers fast

Sarah Crespi, Paul Voosen, Kevin McLean | June 5th, 2025


A wastewater treatment plant isn’t top on everyone’s sightseeing itinerary. But on a cloudless, breezy day in April, Agmed Weber, operations manager for the Walnut Creek plant—which handles more than half of the sewage here in Texas’s booming capital city—is an enthusiastic tour guide. He marvels at the foresight of those who built the jumbo plant a half-century ago, when Austin was a third of its current size. “They were really thinking about the future,” he says. Weber feels a similar pressure—to prepare for not only continued population growth, but also a hotter future. Austin is “in a tight space where we need to think ahead,” he says.

Keywords

climate change, infrastructure, modeling, planning and management, recycled water, water supply forecasting