Water Resources Council definition
Examples of Water Resources Council in a sentence
The Great Lakes—St. ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ River Basin Water Resources Council is hereby created as a body politic and corporate, with succession for the duration of this Compact, as an agency and instrumentality of the governments of the respective Parties.
The New Hampshire Water Resources Council (WRC), a public corporation established by RSA 481:4, filed an appearance and a motion to intervene on May 30, 2002.
The Water Withdrawal Work Group, co-chaired by the Director of the Bureau of Land and Water Quality, was created by the Maine Land and Water Resources Council to explore policies and engage stakeholders.
The water resources management unit (WRM) is a unit established under the National Oil and Gas Authority (NOGA) on behalf of the Water Resources Council (WRC) to focus on enhancing the climate resilience of the water sector in Bahrain by building the framework of climate-resilient integrated water resources management in Bahrain in line with Bahrain’s Vision 2030 and Bahrain’s National Water Strategy 2030.
The Withdrawal Work Group, co-chaired by the Director of the Bureau of Land and Water Quality, was created by the Land and Water Resources Council to explore policies and engage stakeholders.
Maine has two reports detailing what we know about the sources of mercury (Land and Water Resources Council 1997 Annual Report: Mercury in Maine) and mercury in our wastewater (Mercury in Wastewater: Discharges to the Waters of the State, 1999).
Reclamation shall conduct the study in conformity with Water Resources Council, 1983 - Economic and Environmental Principles and Guidelines for Water and Related Land Resources Implementation Studies, and the Reclamation Manual and Instructions governing feasibility studies and NEPA documents, and other applicable Federal laws and regulations.
Several studies that delve into the issue of participation in water resources management, including an analysis of the composition of the National Water Resources Council – as well as that of state councils and basin committees – indicate that the National Policy does not allow effective popular participation (▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇, 2012; CAUBET, 2004).
The Great Lakes-St. ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ River Basin Water Resources Council is hereby created as a body politic and corporate, with succession for the duration of this Compact, as an agency and instrumentality of the governments of the respective Parties.
The Great Lakes – St. ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ River Basin Water Resources Council is hereby created as a body politic and corporate, with succession for the duration of this compact, as an agency and instrumentality of the governments of the respective parties.