Épisodes

  • Part One: Can Texas Drought-Proof Its Economic Miracle?
    Feb 5 2026
    Everything’s bigger in Texas, including a water crisis. According to the Texas Water Development Board, population and industrial demand could outpace existing supply by 7 million acre-feet by 2070—an amount equal to the current annual water demand of the entire state of Arizona. Last November, Texas voters approved the largest investment in water infrastructure in the state’s history: $20 billion over 20 years. But is this enough to address current needs and ongoing rapid growth? In the first part of our series on how present choices in water, energy and growth will shape the future in Texas, we’ll explore: How cities like Corpus Christi are facing impossible trade-offs between the needs of industry and residents Why a 100-year-old “Rule of Capture” is sparking battles over groundwater exports - Whether Texas can balance its booming $2.7 trillion economy with the inescapable realities of water constraints Why is this relevant for the Ten Across region and the NationThis episode features conversations with Texas State hydrologist Robert Mace, Texas 2036 policy director Jeremy Mazur, and real estate broker and water law professor Charles Porter. Relevant Articles and Resources “Inside the Fight for Texas’s Most Precious Resource” (Texas Monthly, September 2025) “Running Out: Texas’ water — and the path forward” (The Texas Tribune Staff, September 2025) “Texas tried to address its water crisis in the ‘60s. A new proposal echoes that historical debate” (Texas Standard, April 2025) “The Impossibly Expensive Plan to Save Texas’s Water Supply” (Texas Monthly, April 2025) Assessing Texas’ Water Infrastructure Needs (Jeremy Mazur, Texas 2036) “Drawing Straws” (Texas Monthly, July 2012) Relevant Ten Across Conversations Podcasts Understanding Groundwater Risks in the Southwest with Jay Famiglietti The Future of Water is Here: Are We Ready? CreditsHost: Duke ReiterWritten, produced, and edited by: Taylor Griffith Episode concept provided by: Kate Carefoot Research and support provided by: Rae Ulrich, Kelly Saunders, and Sabine Butler About our guestsRobert Mace is the executive director of the Meadows Center for Water and the Environment and professor of practice in the Department of Geography & Environmental Studies at Texas State University. He previously worked at the Texas Water Development Board for 18 years, rising to become the Deputy Executive Administrator for Water Science and Conservation. He holds a B.S. in geophysics, M.S. in hydrology and a Ph.D. in hydrogeology. Jeremy Mazur is the director of Infrastructure and Natural Resources Policy at Texas 2036. During the 88th Texas Legislature, he supported policy expanding Texas’s financial strategy for developing water infrastructure, establishing regulatory frameworks for hydrogen energy, and, among other initiatives, incentivizing regional solutions for water utilities. He is currently leading a scenario-based assessment of how different energy portfolio pathways contribute to state economic growth, regional water market development, and responses to extreme weather. Charles Porter is a leading Texas water rights authority, real estate broker and author of multiple books including Water Rights and Policies in the United States. He serves on the National Association of Realtors Board of Directors, has testified as expert witness over 600 times, and successfully sponsored legislation requiring groundwater conservation district disclosure in all Texas residential real estate transactions.
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    27 min
  • SERIES TRAILER | Artificial Limits: Water, Energy, and Growth in Texas
    Jan 30 2026
    Ten Across Conversations returns next week with a limited series, a three-part narrative look at key intersections of water and energy in Texas.

    What does a severe statewide drought, ambitious industry buildout, and rapid population boom tell us about the future in this part of the country and beyond?

    Join us over the next three episodes as we take you from the halls of the Texas legislature, where policymakers are working to secure vulnerable infrastructure and resources across the state, to the Big Country and west where residents watch the land transform into colossal data centers feeding the race to support AI.

    We will explore how these stories connect—how decisions made in the Oval Office are reshaping Texas water, energy and infrastructure policy, how people are navigating changes, and how decisions made here reflect the interests of the Ten Across region and the country at large. Episode one is available February 5th.

    Series release schedule

    February 5th: A look at Texas’s efforts to drought-proof economic and population growth

    February 19th: Meeting direct and indirect water needs tied to data centers

    March 5th: Big tech demands are reshaping the Texas grid and energy landscape

    March 19th: A regional analysis of water, energy, and the future of tech along the I-10




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    3 min
  • 2025 Ten Across Podcast Year in Review
    Dec 19 2025
    This 2025 Ten Across podcast year in review takes a deep dive into the critical issues shaping the future of the Interstate 10 corridor.

    We’ve curated a series of interview clips and reflections that will examine contemporary U.S. climate, economic, and governance-related concerns as presented along this transect. From rising risks in insurance markets to the shifting responsibilities for disaster recovery, we’ll examine the urgent need for proactive solutions.

    Some of the key questions we tackle include:

    Can insurance remain affordable and accessible in an era of escalating climate risks?
    As disaster recovery moves to state and local levels, do these agencies have the capacity to handle increasing demands?
    On the twentieth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, what lesson have we learned and how are they shaping our adaptation efforts today?

    Tune in for a thought-provoking recap and discussion that offers valuable insights into how we can better prepare for and mitigate the impacts of climate change.

    Featured podcasts by order of appearance in this recording:

    10X Convergence: The Region’s Experts Convene to Address the Insurability Crisis

    The Future of Insurability: New Approaches and Mindsets

    Mississippi River Mayors Coalesce to Address Shared Climate Risks

    Why the Ten Across Geography Needs FEMA with Dr. Samantha Montano

    Extreme Heat Has Only Just Begun: How Prepared is the U.S.?

    Katrina’s 20th: Vann R. Newkirk II on What We Owe Climate Disaster Survivors Today


    Katrina’s 20th: Jeff Hébert on Community Recovery and Resilience

    Credits
    Host: Duke Reiter
    Producer and editor: Taylor Griffith
    Research and support provided by: Kate Carefoot, Rae Ulrich, and Sabine Butler
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    29 min
  • End of the Sunbelt Boom? Climate, Cities and the Next Population Shift
    Dec 11 2025
    Economic and social science research suggests climate risks are beginning to inform where people choose to live, raise families, and invest, foreshadowing the decline of a near 75-year trend of domestic migration to the Southern U.S. This is the focus of urban planner and trusted climate adaptation scholar Jesse M. Keenan’s new book, North: The Future of Post-Climate America. As the costs of environmental risks to homes, communities and livelihoods become insupportable in the most vulnerable areas of the country, many who are able will gravitate to regions where life can be relatively stable and secure. North is a comprehensive assessment of trendlines and evidence that suggest how this migration will occur—and how leaders can ensure equity and continuity as American populations shift. Drawing on his extensive background in climate adaptation research, Keenan offers strategies for locations that will be sending people and those that will receive them. He concludes North with a fictional description of what America could look like near the end of this century, when many climate impacts are expected to mature. In this episode, Ten Across founder Duke Reiter and author Jesse Keenan discuss implications for the Ten Across geography, which is among the most climate-vulnerable regions in the country. Relevant Articles and Resources North: The Future of Post-Climate America “Zillow deletes climate risk data from listings after complaints it harms sales” (The Guardian, December 2025) “America’s Home Insurance Affordability Crunch: See What’s Happening Near You.” (The New York Times, November 2025) “As millions face climate relocation, the nation’s first attempt sparks warnings and regret” (Floodlight, September 2025) “Snow Belt to Sun Belt Migration: End of an Era?” (Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, July 2024) “Climate-proof Duluth? Why the city is attracting ‘climate migrants’” (MPR News, October 2021)“Want to Escape Global Warming? These Cities Promise Cool Relief” (The New York Times, April 2019) “The Rise of the Sunbelt” (Edward L. Glaeser and Kristina Tobio, May 2007) Relevant Ten Across Conversations Podcasts How the 10X Region Can Plan for Climate Migration with Abrahm Lustgarten CreditsHost: Duke ReiterProducer and editor: Taylor GriffithMusic by: Pearce Roswell, Out To The World, Johan GlössnerResearch and support provided by: Kate Carefoot, Rae Ulrich, and Sabine Butler About our guestJesse M. Keenan is the Favrot II Associate Professor of Sustainable Real Estate and Urban Planning and Director of the Center on Climate Change and Urbanism at the School of Architecture and Built Environment at Tulane University. His research spans design, engineering, finance, and policy, with service to U.S. government agencies, international organizations, and major corporations. Widely published and cited, Jesse’s work has shaped climate policy, financial regulation, and concepts like climate gentrification. He is the author of North: The Future of Post-Climate America, which is available in bookstores on December 17.
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    44 min
  • The Hard Decisions Ahead for Lower Basin Colorado River States
    Dec 5 2025
    Despite more than two years of intense negotiations, the Veterans’ Day deadline to agree on the allotment of reduced water supplies under the Colorado River Compact passed without a consensus. If the seven states divided into the upper and lower basins of the river cannot put forward a joint proposal by February 14, the federal government will institute its own plan—which will likely result in appeals to the Supreme Court. Since the first federal shortage declaration in 2021, Arizona has volunteered to accept the largest cuts in shares of Colorado River water. Given that a third of its overall water demand has relied on the river’s supply, leaders in the state are anxious to conclude the current negotiations so that their long-term planning for alternatives can proceed. The Central Arizona Project (CAP) is a 330-mile manmade canal built to transport Arizona’s portion of Colorado River water across the state. Approved for federal funding by President Lyndon Johnson in 1968, CAP is an outstanding example of the infrastructural might that has often been required for cities in the Ten Across region to thrive. The urban boom that began in Phoenix and Tucson in the 1980s and 90s would not have been possible without CAP water. In this episode Duke Reiter and Terry Goddard, CAP Board president and former Phoenix mayor, discuss how the state has weathered uncertainties surrounding growth and water security in the past, and how leaders need to step up to meet the present moment...and the future. Relevant Articles and Resources “Former Phoenix mayor: Embrace bad news” (AZ Central, April 2015) “40 Years of Central Arizona Project Water Use” (Kyl Center for Water Policy, December 2025) “’Dream’ of desalinating water to boost Arizona’s supplies moves ahead with vote” (AZ Central, November 2025) “The Peirce Report, Revisited: Greater Phoenix Grows Up” (Greater Phoenix Leadership) 1987 interview with Neal Peirce on PBS Horizon Relevant Ten Across Conversations Podcasts Latest Deadpool Projections Inject New Urgency into Colorado River Negotiations Understanding Groundwater Risks in the Southwest with Jay Famiglietti Checking in on Tense Colorado River Negotiations with Anne Castle and John Fleck CreditsHost: Duke ReiterProducer and editor: Taylor GriffithMusic by: Gavin Luke and Pearce RoswellResearch and support provided by: Kate Carefoot, Rae Ulrich, and Sabine Butler About our guest Terry Goddard served as Arizona attorney general from 2003 to 2010, addressing major issues, including the fallout from the mortgage crisis, border security, and consumer and environmental protections. While mayor of Phoenix from 1984 to 1990, Terry conceived and presided over the Phoenix Futures Forum, the largest city visioning process in the U.S., measured by the number of citizen participants and scope. He was also elected president of the National League of Cities in 1988. Today, Terry is serving his third term as president of the Central Arizona Water Conservation District Board, which oversees the Central Arizona Project.
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    37 min
  • 10X Convergence: The Region's Experts Convene to Address the Insurability Crisis
    Nov 14 2025
    In October, stakeholders representing an unusual combination of sectors — public, private, academic, non-profit and journalism — gathered with insurance industry experts at the 10X Convergence in Jacksonville, Florida, to explore solutions to unsustainable insurance and disaster recovery costs throughout the Interstate 10 region.Insurers continue to cancel homeowners policies across California, Texas, Louisiana, and Florida as exposure to accelerating billion-dollar disasters undermines carriers’ ability to pay out claims while remaining solvent. The industry crisis has begun to spread northward, where a widening Tornado Alley sees growing impacts from property-damaging storms. This is a complex, all-hands-on-deck issue. Insurance practices and building standards have not adapted to the realities of climate change, and have neglected potential to be of powerful mutual support to one another. On the whole, 10X Convergence participants were clear that viable solutions will require a combination of applied climate and economic research with proactive governance and communications strategies, and that this must be matched by industry willingness to innovate its systems of underwriting and community development. In this podcast, Ten Across journalists Maya Chari and Taylor Griffith take you through the problems and potential solutions discussed by the diverse group of experts at the 10X Convergence. Relevant Articles and Resources VIDEO: 10X Convergence Event Wrap Up “It’s harder to get home insurance. That’s changing communities across the U.S.” (NPR, November 2025) “They survived the hurricane. Their insurance company didn’t.” (Grist, November 2025) “Insurance for Physical Climate Risk Management: Lessons from History” (Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, August 2025) “Next to Fall: The Climate-Driven Insurance Crisis is Here—And Getting Worse” (Senate Budget Committee, December 2024) Relevant Ten Across Conversations Podcasts The Future of Insurability: New Approaches and Mindsets Carolyn Kousky on Using Insurance Models to Drive Positive Change Checking in with Dave Jones on California’s Insurance Outlook CreditsHosts: Maya Chari and Taylor GriffithProducer and editor: Taylor GriffithMusic by: Out To The World, Marten Moses, Lennon Hutton, and Pearce RoswellResearch and support provided by: Duke Reiter, Kate Carefoot, Rae Ulrich, and Sabine Butler Guest Bios (in order of appearance): Steve Bowen is the Chief Science Officer and meteorologist at Gallagher Re. Adam Reeder is a civil-structural engineer and principal investigator at CDM Smith. Juliet Rogers is the president of Blue Cottage at CannonDesign. Laura Phillips-Edgecombe is the duPont Fund principal for public spaces and executive on loan to the City of Jacksonville, Florida. Clint Noble is a member of the City of Jacksonville Environmental Protection Board and professional geologist with CDM Smith. Dr. Quinton White is founding executive director of the Marine Science Research Institute and professor emeritus at Jacksonville University. Alex Harris is the lead climate reporter for the Miami Herald. Pete Nelson is the communications director for the Gulf Research Program at the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. Dave Hondula is the director of the Office of Heat Response and Mitigation at the City of Phoenix. Casi Callaway is the founder and president of Activate Build Connect. Eric Corey Freed is the director of sustainability at CannonDesign. Sarina Beges is the associate director of philanthropy and social innovation at the Aspen Institute. Ashantae Green is the sustainability manager for the City of Jacksonville, Florida.
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    34 min
  • The Future of Insurability: New Approaches and Mindsets
    Oct 10 2025
    As a prelude to the Ten Across Convergence in Jacksonville coming up on October 22nd—where insurability planning will be a focal topic—we’re sharing a conversation Charlie Sidoti and Stephen Brandt, founders of the nonprofit InnSure. Concerned about the risk protection gap growing with climate change in the U.S., these two have applied their combined decades of insurance industry expertise to form a professional network dedicated to developing insurance products that support—and therefore incentivize—communities’ proactive fight against the risks they face. Ten Across participants are well-aware of disaster recovery costs soaring in this part of the country. Between 2020 and 2022, State Farm and Allstate dropped a shocking 2.8 million insurance policies in fire-prone areas of California—yet Florida and Louisiana lead the nation with even higher nonrenewal rates. Regulatory reform is struggling to relieve insurers and the insured, and the private market continues to retreat as losses exceed underwriting metrics. InnSure believes the insurance sector can lead the development of new models that incentivize risk reduction and community-based action—that in fact it must, in order to remain viable as an industry. In this episode, Charlie Sidoti and Stephen Brandt walk us through the challenges and solutions insurers consider in devising effective products to support climate risk mitigation—a preview to the multi-sector problem-solving work that attendees will undertake at the upcoming 10X Convergence. Relevant Articles and Resources Charlie Sidoti: “Running Toward Climate Risk” (InsuranceThoughtLeadership.com, August 2022) “How Shutdown Gridlock Could Impede Disaster Preparedness” (The New York Times, Sept. 2025) “A Trump Administration Playbook: No Data, No Problem” (The New York Times, Sept. 2025) REPORT: “Next to Fall: The Climate-Driven Insurance Crisis is Here—And Getting Worse” (Senate Budget Committee, December 2024) “The risky economics of living without homeowners insurance” (Reuters, March 2024) Relevant Ten Across Conversations Podcasts Carolyn Kousky on Using Insurance Models to Drive Positive Change Checking in with Dave Jones on California’s Insurance Outlook Urban Expert Bill Fulton’s Perspective of How LA Can Rebuild Following the Fires 2023 Insurance Series on California, Louisiana, and Florida CreditsHost: Duke ReiterProducer and editor: Taylor GriffithMusic by: From Now On and Lennon HuttonResearch and support provided by: Kate Carefoot, Rae Ulrich, and Sabine Butler About our guests: Charlie Sidoti is executive director of InnSure, a network of insurance professionals and consultants developing innovative industry tools that contribute to the battle against climate risk. Charlie is also a founding coalition partner of GreenieRE, a reinsurance company with a mission to de-risk and unlock capital for clean energy projects. He has more than 25 years of experience in the insurance industry. Stephen Brandt is chief development officer and founding board member of InnSure. Stephen previously served as senior vice president of sales for Vitech Systems Group, a group insurance and pension administration software company. He has more than 20 years of experience in the insurance technology field.
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    38 min
  • Extreme Heat Has Only Just Begun: How Prepared is the U.S.?
    Oct 2 2025
    The Ten Across Resilience Network convened in Jacksonville, Florida, in April to share strategies from their communities—the hottest in the nation—for mitigating the mortality and economic loss caused by extreme heat, and to identify common obstacles to both long-term planning and immediate response. Representatives from the Federation of American Scientists (FAS) joined the exercise to discuss and document the findings. With co-author Dr. Melissa Guardaro, Senior Global Futures Scientist for ASU’s Global Futures Lab, FAS’s Grace Wickerson has drafted a set of policy recommendations for all levels of government and non-governmental actors, “Framework for a Heat-Ready Nation.” This document draws heavily upon the recommendations, challenges and successes raised by Ten Across participants and outlines a series of steps that can be taken to protect people and their livelihoods from rising temperatures nationwide. In this episode, Grace walks us through the five high-priority measures defined in the report; how these points were determined and what it will take to see them carried out. A scientist recognized for their policy advocacy work by last month’s 2025 Grist 50 list, Grace discusses the importance of decisions based on sound science, and how to move forward even as most federal climate policy is rolled back. Relevant Articles and Resources Framework for a Heat-Ready Nation (Ten Across/Federation of American Scientists, July 2025) 2025 Heat Policy Agenda (Federation of American Scientists, January 2025) “As summer ends, Maricopa County is on track to see fewer heat-related deaths than last year” (KJZZ, September 2025) “Ten Across Joins 60+ Organizations in Supporting Federal Policy Agenda for Tackling Extreme Heat” (Ten Across blog, January 2025) “Here’s why an Arizona medical examiner is working to track heat-related deaths” (NPR, June 2024) Relevant Ten Across Conversations Podcasts ASU Researchers Tackle Extreme Heat Relief as Phoenix Temps Soar Urban Planners: The Unexpected Champions of the U.S. Heat Resilience Effort What Some of the Hottest Cities on The 10 Are Doing to Address Deadly Heat CreditsHost: Duke ReiterProducer and editor: Taylor GriffithMusic by: Dew of Light and Lennon HuttonResearch and support provided by: Kate Carefoot, Rae Ulrich, and Sabine Butler About our guest Grace Wickerson is senior manager of Climate and Health on the Climate and Environment team at the Federation of American Scientists. Grace leads programmatic work to showcase how a changing climate impacts health outcomes and public health and healthcare systems through emerging threats like extreme heat and wildfire smoke. Grace holds a master’s of science in Materials Science and Engineering from Northwestern University and was named to this year’s Grist 50 list of climate and justice advocates to watch.
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    47 min