America’s Most Endangered Rivers® of 2024 Spotlights Threats to Your Clean Water
From South Carolina to Alaska, from Connecticut to California, report calls for urgent action
“Without this river, we would not be able to survive,” says Vicente Fernandez, acequia mayordomo and community leader in New Mexico.
New Mexico is the state hardest hit by a recent Supreme Court ruling that left virtually all of the state’s streams and wetlands vulnerable to pollution. This federal action opens the door to potential harmful downstream impacts to the Rio Grande, Gila, San Juan, and Pecos rivers.
It threatens Vicente’s livelihood, and so many others across New Mexico.
This is why the Rivers of New Mexico are #1 in America’s Most Endangered Rivers of 2024 – our annual report that amplifies local leaders calling for solutions to urgent river threats.
This year’s report shines a spotlight on threats to clean water nationwide – for example:
- Tennessee’s Duck River, a drinking water source and hotspot for biodiversity, is at risk from excessive water withdrawals
- California and Mexico’s Tijuana River, is choked with pollution causing illness and beach closures
- California’s Trinity River, a vital source of clean, cold water for the Klamath River, is at risk from water diversions
- Connecticut’s Farmington River, the drinking water source for nearly 400,000 people, is threatened by a hydropower dam causing toxic algae outbreaks
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We chose the 2024 list of Most Endangered Rivers with support from partners nationwide. Groups and individuals shared their nominations, and as we do every year, we built the list based on three key criteria:
- The importance of the river to people and wildlife
- The magnitude of the threat
- A decision point in the coming year that the public can influence
This is the 39th year of America’s Most Endangered Rivers, and it has a track record of results. By teaming up with local partners, generating significant media attention, and galvanizing the public to contact decision-makers and call for solutions we make a big impact together. Over the years, this campaign has helped stop pollution in the Buffalo National River, and it helped protect the Boundary Waters from mining. It played an important role in protecting Wyoming’s beautiful Hoback River, and it has contributed to dam removal efforts from the Penobscot to the Klamath to the Eel.
We’re confident that with your help, we can keep the positive momentum going.
You can learn about America’s Most Endangered Rivers of 2024 by reading the report and watching our video presentation. We also hope you will take action for the rivers, and support our partners – the heart and soul of this campaign.
And, if anyone asks you why protecting small streams is so important for ensuring clean drinking water in New Mexico and nationwide, you can introduce them to Splashy – a little character we dreamed up to advance efforts to strengthen the Clean Water Act.
Stronger clean water protections at the federal level are essential to safeguarding America’s Most Endangered Rivers of 2024, and rivers everywhere.
“All water is connected. We cannot allow pollution anywhere without risk to the rivers we rely on for our drinking water,” said Tom Kiernan, President and CEO of American Rivers. “Our leaders must hold polluters accountable and strengthen the Clean Water Act to safeguard our health and communities.”
America’s Most Endangered Rivers® of 2024:
#1: Rivers of New Mexico
Threat: Loss of federal clean water protections
#2: Big Sunflower and Yazoo Rivers – Mississippi
Threat: Yazoo Pumps project threatens wetlands
#3: Duck River – Tennessee
Threat: Excessive water use
#4: Santa Cruz River – Arizona
Threat: Water scarcity, climate change
#5: Little Pee Dee River – North Carolina, South Carolina
Threat: Harmful development, highway construction
#6: Farmington River – Connecticut, Massachusetts
Threat: Hydropower dam
#7: Trinity River – California
Threat: Outdated water management
#8: Kobuk River – Alaska
Threat: Road construction
#9 Tijuana River – California, Mexico
Threat: Pollution
#10: Blackwater River – West Virginia
Threat: Highway development
12 responses to “America’s Most Endangered Rivers® of 2024 Spotlights Threats to Your Clean Water”
How can a river be nominated for an endangered one? The Blanco River in Texas is a short clear river which has been dammed up by various land owners is now dry for large parts of its length.
I do my part by creating a water source for wildlife+drought tolerant trees while allowing native flora+fauna to live in the natural environment in the high Mojave near an ACEC+a large acreage owned by the Mojave Desrt Land Trust. On my off the grid land, waterlines+drip emitters enhance the growth of windswept Allepo pines,Arizona Ash+poplars surrounding my cabin w expansive views into the distant mountains much like what’s found in JTNP from my solar well
I would like to know, what can I do to help save the Tennessee Duck 🦆 River. Sometimes it only takes one to get things started.
Thank you for posting this very important status of America’s waterways. We need to elect the right people to assist in getting us what we need to correct this travesty
A great service you provide to our river community.
We’re fighting the Corridor H highway that threatens the Blackwater River.. WVDOH ignores the wishes of the people affected by the new highway. Threats including noise pollution in a wild area that has had millions of dollars spent to restore and is on the cusp of becoming a wild trout stream after 100 years of mine damage. The noise will permeate the area. Even the Historic towns of Davis and Thomas will be affected. It will also ruin the view shed of an important historical site.
Friends of the Blackwater Canyon are looking for support to save the river and validate decades of work and thousands of hours and money donated to make real changes for the better on this river system. We fought hard and long to bring fish back to streams with much success. We fought housing development, a pumped water storage site that would destroy a trout stream and place billions of gallons of water in a dangerous position atop an abandoned mine. We fought for years to get a new $12,000,000 AMD treatment plant on the very stream DOH wants to ruin with a highway.
Anything you do to help will make a change with one of the most dedicated, hard working watershed groups out there with a record of success.
Friends of Blackwater Canyon, Thomas, WV, 304-345-7663
Thanks for including the Tijuana River, whose pollution harms not only the river but nearby beaches in San Diego, making them subject to closure. I hope this designation inspires building adequate infrastructure to deal with this recurring problem.
I am glad you just mentioned 10 rivers but I believe there are a lot more than just ten rivers. Every river in this country is extremely dangerous, polluted and full of garbage , just like third world countries..
Instead of helping different militaries of the world and create more conflicts in different regions. Please invest in people’s well being in this country. Stop spending our tax money on guns and bombs and destroy people’s environment in different countries.
Please Clean our environment. Pay attention to diversity and the preservation of different species . Plant more trees. Clean our river and our drinking water. Save our homeless people.
This is not too much to ask. This is just a basic request. Please spend our tax money for better causes. Please make us one of the happiest countries in the world on the list.
You forgot the Merrimack in NH, as well as the Contoocook, Nashua, and the northern rivers !
STOP DESTROYING OUR PLANET
Lets clean it up
The rivers and streams in New Mexico (los ríos y rítos de Nuevo México) are unique and special, not merely for the riparian bosque forests that carve lush green strips through the desolate deserts and arid steppes, but also for the unique centuries-old cultural mixture of the Pueblo Indian and old Spanish, and the delicate system of farmed-yet-natural-looking fields watered by the river’s acequias, that are uniquely New Mexican.