
Celebration time – it’s 11 years for CAP and WaterSense!
For 11 years, Central Arizona Project has partnered with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) WaterSense program. WaterSense helps consumers decrease indoor and outdoor water

For 11 years, Central Arizona Project has partnered with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) WaterSense program. WaterSense helps consumers decrease indoor and outdoor water

At first glance, with Central Arizona Project employees eying graphs and data on a flat-screen television monitor and making their picks, one might conclude this

On March 23, Lake Pleasant’s water level hit 1,698.3 feet in elevation, which is just a few feet from maximum conservation space capacity at elevation

Caddisflies, beware: More channel catfish are now in the Central Arizona Project canal. They arrived after a 14-hour drive from Arkansas. Can you say, “Hungry”?

The boy with the red glasses and spiked hair grinned proudly as he stood in the boat. His dad pulled a hulking largemouth bass out

Whether it’s a farmer, botanist, or fisherman navigating a river, sometimes the best business asset is that perpetual, thermonuclear explosion we know as the sun.

View CAP’s power portfolio: Here’s a big job: Imagine moving water approximately 336 miles uphill across the state. It takes CAP a significant amount of

The conductor’s arms go up and one by one; the musicians join in. The poetic melody from the flutes, bright tone of the violins, playful