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Water and Climate Justice

Water and Climate Justice Program

Water and Climate Justice

Through Santa Clara University’s Water and Climate Justice Lab, we conduct research with community and academic partners to improve access to safe water in California’s Central Valley and Central America, where water resources are threatened by contamination and climate-induced drought. We collaborate with communities to determine the extent and nature of climate disruption, and to plan and create sustainable water systems and green spaces. We also support local partners to build climate resilience by developing mitigation and adaptation plans and projects that ensure communities will remain liveable as the climate warms.

ContactIris Stewart-Frey

Water and Climate Events

Water and Climate Publications 


  • Projects

  • Improving Water Quality and Access to Safe Water in California’s Central Valley and Central Coast

    This project involves multiple collaborative studies in California to strengthen disadvantaged communities’ improved access to clean water under severe drought and climate change, and to address water contamination by nitrates, uranium, pesticides, and other pollutants. We provide expertise, analysis, public comments, and other support to our community partners, empowering them to advocate for greater consideration of environmental justice  in the regulatory process (including the state’s CV-SALTS process, Ag Order 4.0, and the Dairy Order), and ultimately contributing to a more just, resilient and sustainable water system.

    Image: Stephanie Davis

    SCU Participants: Iris Stewart-Frey, Jake Dialesandro, Aria Amirbahman, William Rush, and multiple student co-authors

    Partners: , , , , , , ,

    Funder: CalEPA, Environmental Justice Data Fund, Rose Foundation, Markkula Center for Applied Ethics, Clare Boothe Luce Foundation

    For more information:

  • Equity in the Distribution of Water Under Climate Change in California’s Central Valley

    This project examines the equity implications of water allocation under climate change in California’s Central Valley, focusing on how shifting water availability affects different communities and agricultural stakeholders. It integrates statistical modeling with social and environmental justice frameworks to assess who bears the costs and who benefits from evolving water management policies.

    Image: Andrew Schatz

    SCU Participants: Iris Stewart-Frey and multiple student co-authors

    Partners: , , ,

    Funders: CalEPA, Markkula Center for Applied Ethics, Clare Boothe Luce Foundation

    For more information:

  • Testing Domestic Wells for Nitrates and Heavy Metals in Underserved Agricultural Communities

    We support our community partners in investigating the temporal and spatial gaps in domestic well testing across California’s Central Valley and Central Coast, where agricultural nitrate and heavy metal contamination pose ongoing risks to historically marginalized communities outside of community water systems. Many wells are tested only every few years, despite evidence that contaminant levels can fluctuate seasonally, leaving residents uncertain about the safety of their drinking water. By examining these gaps, the study highlights the urgent need for more frequent and consistent well monitoring and sustainable solutions to ensure equitable access to safe water and support environmental justice.

    Image: Stephanie Davis

    SCU Participants: Iris Stewart-Frey, Jake Dialesandro, Aria Amirbahman, William Rush and multiple student co-authors

    Partners: ,

    Funder: CalEPA, Rose Foundation, Clare Boothe Luce Foundation

    For more information:

  • Strengthening Water Security under Climate-Induced Drought in Central America

    This long-term body of collaborative work seeks to further understanding on drought and climate disruption in Central America and supports smallholder farming communities in developing strategies for adaptation and sustainable water use. We have conducted community-based climate change research in Central America, mapped water sources, and measured flow, and sought to make the results accessible to the smallholder farming communities most affected by climate impacts. 

    Image:

    SCU Participants: Iris Stewart-Frey, Ed Maurer, Allan Baez Morales, Raul Diaz, Qiuwen Li, and multiple student co-authors

    Partners: Raul Díaz and Helen Hernández Blandón (),  , (Stanford University), (University of Freiburg), (University of Costa Rica)

    Funders: National Science Foundation Geography and Spatial Sciences (Grant Number BCS 1539795),  DFG (German Research Foundation) grant STA 632/6-1, Freiburg Institute of Advanced Studies (FRIAS), Clare Boothe Luce Foundation

    For more information:

  • A Mobile App to Support Climate Adaptation in Northern Nicaragua

    Smallholder farmers in Northern Nicaragua face significant vulnerability to climate variability, as most rely on rain-fed agriculture and cultivate marginal lands that are highly sensitive to changing weather patterns. In several focus groups, farmers consistently highlighted the critical challenge of accessing timely and accurate climate information to guide decisions about planting, irrigation, and harvest management. Addressing this pressing need, the NicaAgua app was developed as a locally relevant tool that provides real-time climate forecasts and decision-support information tailored to these communities. By enabling farmers to anticipate climatic shifts and make informed agricultural choices, the app strengthens adaptive capacity and resilience, supporting both immediate livelihood security and long-term sustainability. The development process emphasizes participatory engagement and local knowledge, ensuring that technological solutions align with the priorities and lived experiences of the farmers they are designed to serve.

    Image: Raul Diaz

    SCU Participants: Iris Stewart-Frey, Allan Baez Morales, Ed Maurer, Qiuwen Li, and multiple student co-authors

    Partners: Raul Díaz and Helen Hernández Blandón ()

    Funders: Whitham Foundation, Miller Center for Global Impact, Clare Boothe Luce Foundation

    For more information:

  • Food and Water Security in Nicaraguan Farming Communities

    An interdisciplinary team of SCU faculty and students has engaged in a multi-year collaboration with Nicaraguan community organizations to improve food and water security for farming communities hit hard by climate-induced drought, and other environmental and economic challenges.

    SCU Participants: Iris Stewart-Frey, Edwin Maurer, Chris Bacon, Raul Diaz, William Sundstrom, Lisa Kelley, and multiple student co-authors

    Partner:

    Funder: National Science Foundation Geography and Spatial Sciences (Grant Number BCS 1539795)

    For more information:

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  • Vulnerability and Climate Resilience to Flooding in Historically Marginalized Communities

    Researchers and community partners collaborated with residents of Pajaro, CA to examine how climate change–intensified flooding disproportionately impacts historically underserved communities living behind levees. Centered on the March 2023 flood and levee failure, the project combined spatial analysis and in-depth interviews to understand the social, economic, and political factors that shaped residents’ experiences of disaster and recovery. Working closely with local families, many of whom are low-income and Spanish-speaking farmworkers, the team developed an environmental justice framework to guide more equitable flood mitigation and adaptation strategies. By integrating community knowledge with engineering and policy considerations, the project aimed to strengthen levee resilience, improve disaster response, and advance fairer protections for vulnerable populations facing increasing climate risks.

    Image:

    SCU Participants: Iris Stewart-Frey, Rocio Lilen Segura, David DeCosse and multiple student co-authors

    Partners: Community of Pajaro,

    Funder: Markkula Center for Applied Ethics, Clare Boothe Luce Foundation, Environmental Justice and the Common Good Initiative

    For more information:

  • Environmental Justice and Water Risk in California’s Data Center Expansion

    We examined how the rapid growth of data centers across California intersects with environmental justice and water scarcity using community-based case studies. Using a Social and Water Vulnerability Index, the project mapped facilities in established hubs such as Santa Clara County and Los Angeles County, as well as newer sites in more rural and groundwater-dependent regions. The study found that while earlier data centers clustered in major tech corridors, newer and proposed hyperscale facilities are increasingly located in communities facing higher poverty, pollution burdens, and climate-sensitive water supplies. Limited transparency around actual water use and environmental review raises concerns about cumulative impacts. By centering environmental justice, the project offers tools to guide more equitable and water-resilient planning for digital infrastructure.

    SCU Participants: Iris Stewart-Frey, Irinia Raicu and multiple student co-authors

    Partners: Markkula Center for Applied Ethics

    Funder: Next10 Foundation, Clare Boothe Luce Foundation

    For more information:

  • Improving Access to Green Spaces in Modesto, CA

    Researchers and community partners engaged the city and residents of Modesto in planning and implementing greater access to green spaces in underserved neighborhoods. One such project is an extension of the Tuolumne River Regional Park at Carpenter Road, a former waste site that has now been cleaned up. Once completed, the park will  provide a host of benefits for human and ecosystem health.

    SCU Participants: Iris Stewart-Frey and multiple student co-authors

    Partners:

    Funder: CalEPA

    For more information:

  • Strengthening Environmental Benefits for Underserved Schools and Neighborhoods in Silicon Valley

    Researchers and community partners investigated the disproportionate impact of environmental burdens and lack of environmental benefits for disadvantaged communities and schools, measured air pollution, and researched mitigation strategies.

    SCU Participants: Iris Stewart-Frey, Chris Bacon, and multiple student co-authors

    Partners:

    Funders: Thriving Neighbors, deNardo Foundation

    For more information: