Latest news with #Roerink
Yahoo
02-06-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Cabka CFO Frank Roerink to step down by November
Netherlands-based packaging solutions provider Cabka has announced that its chief financial officer (CFO), Frank Roerink, will step down from his position by the end of November 2025. Roerink cited personal reasons for his departure and has committed to a six-month notice period to ensure a smooth transition. During his tenure, Cabka was listed at Euronext Amsterdam on 1 March 2022. The company said it has already begun the process of finding a suitable successor for Roerink and will make an announcement regarding the new CFO in due course. Cabka supervisory board chair Niek Hoek said: 'We understand and respect Frank's decision to step down as CFO of Cabka. We would like to express our gratitude for his leadership, professionalising the organisation, and his ability to maintain stability and continuity during turbulent times. We expect to provide an update on succession shortly.' Cabka is known for recycling hard-to-recycle plastic waste into reusable transport packaging such as pallets and large container solutions. Cabka's focus on creating construction and road safety products made entirely from post-consumer waste has positioned it as a pioneer in the industry, it claims. With an integrated approach that encompasses waste collection, recycling, and manufacturing, Cabka has demonstrated its capability to maximise returns by reintroducing recycled plastics into the production loop. The company continues to exploit the full value chain, from waste to end products, backed by its own innovation centre. In April 2025, Cabka reported revenue of €181.9m ($189.4m) in financial year 2024, ending 31 December, down 8% from €196.9m in 2023. "Cabka CFO Frank Roerink to step down by November" was originally created and published by Packaging Gateway, a GlobalData owned brand. The information on this site has been included in good faith for general informational purposes only. It is not intended to amount to advice on which you should rely, and we give no representation, warranty or guarantee, whether express or implied as to its accuracy or completeness. You must obtain professional or specialist advice before taking, or refraining from, any action on the basis of the content on our site. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Newsweek
12-05-2025
- Climate
- Newsweek
Lake Mead Water Warning Issued: 'Painful Summer'
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. New data suggest that a disappointing snowpack could result in less water than previously thought for America's two largest reservoirs. Why It Matters Lake Mead is a vital water source for millions of people across Nevada, Arizona, California, and parts of Mexico. Its declining levels potentially jeopardize municipal water supplies, agricultural irrigation, and hydroelectric power generation. What To Know Officials previously raised concerns about the water levels in Lake Mead and Lake Powell, following a lacking winter snowpack that threatened to stall progress made during last year's wetter-than-average season. File photo of Lake Mead as seen from Hoover Dam at the Nevada and Arizona border. File photo of Lake Mead as seen from Hoover Dam at the Nevada and Arizona border. bloodua/Getty Images The resulting water supply is expected to be even lower than earlier projections. Scientists now forecast runoff into Lake Powell to reach just 55 percent of the average, down from the previous estimate of 67 percent, according to data from the National Weather Service's Colorado Basin River Forecast Center cited by the Las Vegas Review-Journal. Lake Powell, situated along the Arizona-Utah border, and Lake Mead, located near Las Vegas, are both integral components of the Colorado River system. The Colorado River Basin supplies water to more than 40 million people across seven states and Mexico. Lake Mead, which receives flows from Lake Powell, hit critically low levels during the summer of 2022 following years of drought. The lakes are the two largest reservoirs in the U.S., with a combined capacity of approximately 55 million acre-feet. At the time of writing, Lake Mead's water levels were 1,060.06 feet mean sea level, 168.94 feet below its full pool of 1,229, according to Lakes Online, an online resource for lake and reservoir information. What People Are Saying Kyle Roerink, executive director of the Great Basin Water Network, told the Las Vegas Review-Journal: "It's going to be a painful summer, watching the levels go down. We're getting to those dangerous levels we saw a few years ago." "These types of runoff conditions make water managers nervous," Roerink said. "They make NGOs nervous, and they certainly make water users nervous." What Happens Next Meanwhile, the states that rely on the Colorado River have been engaged in negotiations to develop new water-sharing agreements by 2026. A study earlier this year suggested that increasing wastewater recycling to 40 percent in states within the basin could conserve nearly 900,000 acre-feet of Colorado River water annually, enough to supply almost two million households. The authors advocate for policy actions such as new federal reuse guidelines, standardized reporting, and expanded grant programs to promote water recycling.
Yahoo
08-03-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Colorado River choices botched by feds under Biden, letter to Burgum alleges
LAS VEGAS (KLAS) — The federal agency charged with managing the Colorado River failed to do its job properly when it excluded a viable option presented by Nevada, Arizona and California, according to documents that surfaced Friday. The three states that make up the Lower Basin are fighting a critical war for their rights to water from the river. The future of growing cities is in the balance, along with farms, businesses and everyone else in the desert Southwest. On Friday, a Feb. 13 letter to incoming Interior Secretary Doug Burgum was obtained by 8 News Now, along with a supporting document that argues the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation is making a big mistake by refusing to address a known problem with Glen Canyon Dam, which creates the nation's second-largest reservoir, Lake Powell. The dam is unable to release enough water to meet downriver commitments once Lake Powell drops below 3,490 feet elevation. And none of the five alternatives under active study by Reclamation directly addresses that problem, Lower Basin leaders say. The alternative that they proposed was eliminated in Reclamation's Jan. 18 decision that marked the agency's handoff from the Biden administration to President Donald Trump's team. The Lower Basin wants Reclamation's 54-page memo retracted. The Great Basin Water Network, a conservation effort headed by Kyle Roerink in Nevada, released the documents. 'We applaud the fortitude and willingness of Lower Basin leadership to stand up for issues that could have immense impact on the 25 million residents of Las Vegas, Phoenix and Los Angeles, agricultural communities, and ecosystems,' Roerink told 8 News Now. 'Lower Basin water managers highlighting the River Outlet Works issue at Glen Canyon Dam is unprecedented and couldn't have come at a better time. With such small snowpacks looming large, we need to get serious about what smaller river flows will do to our ways of life. We hope the Trump Administration heeds the calls of the officials on the letter. It is a golden opportunity to do what no other administration has been willing to do,' Roerink said. The letter is signed by John Entsminger, general manager of the Southern Nevada Water Authority, as well as the chief water managers in Arizona and California. They signed the letter as 'governor's representative' of each state. 'Of particular concern is the report's complete omission of compliance with the 1922 Colorado River Compact, the foundation of the Law of the River,' the letter states. 'Additionally, the prior administration's approach to protecting the Lake Powell outlet works by reducing releases from Lake Powell — rather than making infrastructure repairs and improvements — is shortsighted and harms the Lower Basin States by slashing the water available to our farmers, communities, and economies. These profound impacts can be avoided by some combination of straight forward engineering fixes, moving water to Lake Powell from upstream reservoirs when necessary, and temporary reductions in Upper Basin use,' according to the letter. As of Friday, snowpack levels in the Upper Colorado River Basin were at 92% of normal. Snowpack generally peaks in the first week of April. Levels can fluctuate due to warm temperatures and precipitation. The past five days have been among the best for conditions in Upper Basin, with snowpack growing from 85% of normal since Monday. The U.S. Department of Agriculture measures the snow water equivalent (SWE) at 130 SNOTEL monitoring stations in the Upper Basin, with daily updates. Entsminger and his Lower Basin colleagues asked to meet with Burgum to brief him on the situation. In an attachment to their letter, they criticized Reclamation for failing to adequately meet the requirements of the NEPA (National Environmental Policy Act) process. Reclamation didn't disclose how it interprets the Colorado River Compact of 1922, known as the Law of the River. Without that information, states and water managers across the Southwest are left to guess what the federal government will do if Lake Powell drops dramatically again. Both Lake Mead and Lake Powell dropped to about 25% capacity in 2021. Lake Powell is currently at 34% and Lake Mead is at 35%. Conservation groups identified the problem at Glen Canyon Dam in August 2022, revealing that the four pipes that make up the River Outlet Works couldn't carry enough water to meet requirements of the Law of the River. Those are the only pipes available when Lake Powell drops below 3,490 feet. It is currently at 3,562 feet. When snowpack grew to 160% of normal in 2023, Reclamation released an enormous amount of water in a 'high-flow experiment' release through Glen Canyon Dam's River Outlet Works. In April 2024, Reclamation said an inspection found damage inside the pipes, yet another problem that Reclamation has at the dam. The high-flow experiment releases haven't been repeated since 2023. Glen Canyon Dam has been a frequent target despite a thriving recreation industry at Lake Powell. Reclamation has staunchly defended importance or the infrastructure that produces power there for the surrounding region. Lower Basin leaders called on Burgum to direct Reclamation to 'retract its previously released Alternatives Report and meet with representatives of the Lower Basin States to discuss the technical and legal deficiencies' in that report. They conclude: 'The Lower Basin States have demonstrated here that Reclamation's range of alternatives in the ongoing NEPA process is improperly constrained by Reclamation's required assumption to protect elevation 3,490 ft in Lake Powell for every action alternative included for detailed consideration to date. Reclamation's own admissions show that options to protect Glen Canyon Dam infrastructure other than a hard-protect elevation of 3,490 ft for Lake Powell may exist but are impermissibly under consideration outside the NEPA process. Reclamation's unsupported assumption to protect Glen Canyon Dam infrastructure in only one way impermissibly elevates a narrow, artificially constrained infrastructure protection priority over the congressional purposes for project operation and the requirements of the Compact and 1944 Treaty with Mexico to supply water. Reclamation's failure to identify and consider options for the Glen Canyon Dam infrastructure situation in its DEIS will — if not corrected — render the resulting Final EIS and Record of Decision invalid.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.