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Conserving Water, One Toilet At A Time

Entries for the ‘Water Crisis’ Category

Caifornia Drought and the Groundwater Replenishment System — Produces Water @ $600.00 Per Acre Foot : Within 3 Years, Imported Water will Cost $800.00 Per Acre Foot = Year’s Supply for 2 Families (Treehugger)

(March 15, 2009, Treehugger)
Visitors to Disneyland likely don’t know that when they sip from Disney water fountains that the great tasting aqua treat was once streaming through a public sewer. Not to worry though. That sewer water is actually substantially cleaner and more carefully filtered than the water consumed in the average American household. Moreover, [...]

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California Drought Water Bank but Very Little Water Supply to Sell: $275.00 Per Acre Foot of Water (OrovilleMercuryRegister)

(March 14, 2009, The Oroville Mercury-Register)
The state is shopping for water for the Drought Water Bank, but a variety of factors has supplies drying up.Despite a hefty price for the sale of water, environmental constraints and good prices for commodities have far less Sacramento Valley water users signing up to sell water to other parts [...]

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Having Enough Water to Drink: Tampa Bay Surface Water Reservoir Supply GONE; Groundwater and Desalinated Water Only Water Tampa Bay can Rely On (MSNBC)

(March 13, 2009, MSNBC)
With local lakes and rivers at critically low levels, the region’s water provider has virtually shut down the surface water supply to the Tampa Bay region.
“The reservoir’s level is so low we are unable to provide water, consistently, to the water treatment plant and we are unable to pull water from the [...]

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Home Water Conservation: Reusing White, Gray and Black Water (Reuters)

(March 9, 2009, Reuters)
From cotton farms to factories that make high-tech computer chips, companies face huge risks from droughts like those searing California and Australia and that recently parched the U.S. Southeast.
Climate scientists say droughts will become more common as higher temperatures evaporate water supplies and overuse drain aquifers faster than they can be replenished [...]

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Aquifer Levels Continue Severe Decline in Southwest Florida, from which Tampa Bay Area gets 80% of Its Water!!! (TBNWeekly)

(March 8, 2009, TBNWeekly)
The latest report from The Southwest Florida Water Management District shows aquifer levels are continuing to fall.
According to the district’s March 6 Aquifer Resource Weekly Update, the central aquifer, which is a water source for the Tampa Bay region, is down to a negative 1.69 feet. Last week, the aquifer was at [...]

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Californa Water Grab: Repudiating the OMG Worst Drought (Robert in Monterey, Calitics)

(March 11, 2009, Robert in Monterey, Calitics)
As someone who has written before of the water problems our state faces, and who has repeated the “omg worst drought ever” frame, it’s important that I give some necessary attention to Michael Fitzgerald of The Stockton Record, who called bullshit on the whole thing today:
California’s “drought” is overblown. [...]

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Invisible Water of Life: Global Threat to Our Groundwater Supply (Europa)

(March 10, 2009, The Europa Research Information Centre)
Since world governments decided that improving the management of the planet’s water reserves was a major priority, the threats hanging over groundwater have suddenly become front-page news. However, inconsistencies remain…
Since ancient times, water diviners have doused for water armed only with a wooden stick (or divining rod). Most [...]

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West must Secure Water Supply, Even at High Price: California Uses Enough Water Per Year to Cover Washington State in Foot of It (Reuters)

(March 10, 2009, Reuters)
It’s hard to visualize a water crisis while driving the lush boulevards of Los Angeles, golfing Arizona’s green fairways or watching dancing Las Vegas fountains leap more than 20 stories high.
So look Down Under. A decade into its worst drought in a hundred years Australia is a lesson of what the American [...]

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Biggest Risk to Business – Water Rationing and Water Shortage: Why not Raise Water Prices Instead, which can be Passed on More Easily to Consumer? (Aguanomics)

(March 10, 2009, Aguanomics)
The title of this post is my reformulation of “missing the forest for the trees,” and the subject of the post is a new report from the Pacific Institute.
In Water Scarcity and Climate Change: Growing Risks for Businesses and Investors, the PI assesses the various risks to water supplies that companies should [...]

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From Bread Basket to Water Basket Case: A Taste of Future Water Rationing Revisited (in California) (LeakBird)

David Curran wrote a stimulating op-ed on the California drought in Sunday’s San Francisco Chronicle.  Mr. Curran expressed his perplexity at the incongruity of intermittent first quarter flooding in the Bay Area and the Governor’s dire “worst drought ever” declaration.
California has gone from being the bread basket of the US to a water crisis basket [...]

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From California to Oklahoma, Drought may Wreak Environmental Havoc on US (Guardian)

(Feb. 26, 2009, The Guardian)

The world’s pre-eminent climate scientists produced a blunt assessment of the impact of global warming on the US yesterday, warning of droughts that could reduce the American south-west to a wasteland and heatwaves that could make life impossible even in northern cities.
In an update on the latest science on climate change, [...]

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The Long Tail of the Super Chinese Water Infrastructure: Less is More (FresnoBee)

(March 8, 2009, The Fresno Bee)
It is China’s latest grand attempt to tame nature. Three canals will bring water hundreds of miles to Beijing and other thirsty cities in the north. More than 350,000 people in the way will be forced to move.
For many in Zhangyigang, a village of 942 people in brick and mud [...]

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Three Reasons for the Growing Demand for Water Conservation Technologies in the Drought Environment (LeakBird)

As the growing demand for all things water escalates across the United State (hydrologists, water conservation systems, water lawyers, new sources of water, et cet.), the drought environment, such as regions in Georgia, Florida, Nevada and California, has the highest market demand water conservation technologies for three reasons:

 
Timeliness
Fast Payback
Higher Water Rates

 
Timeliness
This is perhaps the most [...]

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Solving the Water Shortage Crisis: Water Innovation Opportunities for Water Entrepreneurs (SramanaMitra)

(March 8, 2009, SramanaMitra)
While people focus on carbon footprints and potential ways to reduce the impact man-made CO2 emissions, the world is running out of another of its key elements: fresh water.
We use fresh water much faster than it can replenish: it is increasingly scarce and has no alternative.
Water is a strategic resource for countries [...]

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Drinking Away the Dead Sea: New Study — Human Water Consumption has Taken Dead Sea to Record, Environmentally Dangerous Water Levels (Huliq)

(March 4, 2009, Huliq)

The water levels in the Dead Sea – the deepest point on Earth – are dropping at an alarming rate with serious environmental consequences, according to Shahrazad Abu Ghazleh and colleagues from the University of Technology in Darmstadt, Germany.
(Original Article Here)

The projected Dead Sea-Red Sea or Mediterranean-Dead Sea Channels therefore need a [...]

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Whiskey’s for Drinkin’, but Water’s for Fightin’ –The Trouble with the Southwest is There’s Not Much Water Left HERE: Similar in California, Florida, Georgia (Randall Amster, HuffingtonPost)

(March 5, 2009, Randall Amster, Huffington Post)

Life here in the desert southwest is richly complex and oftentimes a great challenge. A hint of frontier culture remains even as rampant growth and homogenization take hold at breakneck speed. People love the landscapes and the history, but can still sit and watch both disappear in the name [...]

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Water the Ultimate Luxury: In Pakistan — Rain Delays All Plans; Water is Stolen; Water Part of Daily Consversation (SoundNews)

(March 5, 2009, The Sound News)

Rainy Seattle, nestled between Lake Washington and Puget Sound, enjoys an abundance of the wet stuff. Being surrounded by water and having it come down on us throughout the year is misleading in thinking that general availability and accessibility is the norm. The collective mindset reflects a standard, a high [...]

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Sacramento, California Per Capita Water Consumption 280 Gallons Per Day!!!: California National Average 192 (SacramentoBee)

(March 5, 2009, The Sacramento Bee)
Sacramento leaders on Tuesday said the city’s enormous thirst for water does not mesh with its Earth-friendly aspirations, and vowed to change.
In a workshop on water conservation, a majority of the Sacramento City Council said aggressive new policies are needed to save water. This may include stronger enforcement of water [...]

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California Drought Deception Emergency?: Water Levels Look Acceptable, but Overpopulation and Fragile Delta Looming could Exacerbate Problem (SanFranciscoChronicle)

(March 5, 2009, The San Francisco Chronicle)
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s declaration of a statewide drought emergency last week had classic comic timing: It’s been pouring ever since. What’s not funny are the governor’s proposals: Expedited water transfers now, which may adversely affect fish and wildlife, and possible mandatory rationing later. Is the drought really that bad?
Some [...]

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Mandatory Water Rationing Later on This Month: Water Shortage Still Imminent in California in Spite of Heavy Rains, which would “Need to Last Until November” to Stop Drought (MercuryNews)

(March 4, 2009, The Mercury News)

It has been nearly a week since Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger dropped the bomb, laying out a doomsday drought scenario so starkly apocalyptic he sounded like Dr. Strangelove. And yet, Justina Pillado endured weather Tuesday in the teeth of the governor’s state of emergency that made her toes curl.
“This rain sucks,” [...]

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Central Valley Water Districts of California Sue Federal Government over Rules on Endangered Delta Smelt (MercuryNews)

(March 3, 2009, The Mercury News)
A coalition of water districts in California’s Central Valley are suing to stop the federal government from enforcing a new set of rules governing the endangered delta smelt.A lawsuit filed Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Fresno by the Westlands Water District, the San Luis and Delta-Mendota Water Authority says [...]

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Australia Ahead of California on Its Water Markets: Every Household Metered for Water Down Under; Water Licenses, Not Water Rights; Better Indoor & Underground Water Efficiency; Less Water Consumption Per Capita — Zetland: Cheap Water’s Result is Water Shortage (David Zetland, Aguanomics)

(March 4, 2009, David Zetland, Aguanomics)
RT writes:
I am an economist from Australia who works on among other issues urban water policy.
I read with interest your nicely-written Forbes article.
We seem to have pretty much a similar situation here in Australia and a few of us make similar suggestions.
I’d love to understand more about the your situation [...]

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‘Wet Water’ Vs. ‘Paper Water’: New Eric Kuhn Study — Colorado River with Only 150,000 Acre Feet (AF) of Additional Water Left for Colorado Itself, According to the Colorado River Compact; 10% of ‘Paper Water’ Lies!!! — “I’d Rather be Upstream with a Shovel and a Ditch than Downstream with a Decree.” (Aquadoc, WaterWired)

(March 4, 2009, Aquadoc, WaterWired)
The current issue (2 March 2009) of the High Country News has a revealing article by Matt Jenkins, “How Low Will It Go?”. Jenkins describes the mission of Eric Kuhn, an engineer and former submariner who now runs the Colorado River Water Conservation District in western Colorado.
So what is his mission? Simple. [...]

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US Water Systems Key to Local Food, National Security: As Much as Third of Cities’ Water Usage Goes to FLUSHING TOILETS!!! (Tim Gamble, NextStrategies)

(Feb. 23, 2009, Tim Gamble, NextStrategies)
In January, I published an open letter to President Obama humbly giving him my unsolicited advice on what national policies he should follow in terms of national energy and sustainability policies. But what about local communities? What advice would I give local politicians, bureaucrats and community leaders?
First, I would suggest [...]

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Building the Case for Acoustic Water Leak Detection Equipment in Running and Leaking Toilet Fixtures (LeakBird)

Acoustic water leak detection has been around a long time. It predominates in the water industry when it comes to listening for leaks in underground pipes, in order to protect and secure municipal water supplies from catastrophic underground leaks.  A couple of companies that come to mind are SubSurface Leak Detection, Inc, Davis-Inotek Instruments and [...]

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Sacramento Sewage Company to Begin Selling Wastewater?: 1.4M Customers’ 180K AF Per Year of Wastewater to Become New Muncipal Water Source!!! (SacramentoBee)

(March 2, 2009, The Sacramento Bee)
Californians have grown accustomed to digesting odd ideas that routinely flow out of Sacramento, many of them not so palatable.
But are they ready for this one?
Last week, amid a third year of a statewide drought, the Sacramento Regional County Sanitation District adopted a strategy to sell treated sewage as drinking [...]

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Drought Declaration Ambiguity: California Locals Concerned over Groundwater Control, Schwarzenegger’s Meaning in “Expedited Water Transfers” (MSNBC)

(Feb. 28, 2009, MSNBC)
Butte County water officials have concerns that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s proclamation Friday on the drought isn’t clear about protecting local control over groundwater.
Paul Gosselin, director of the county Department of Water and Resource Conservation, said there are concerns about what exactly the governor means by “expedited water transfers.”
Butte County has an ordinance [...]

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California Cities must Reduce Water Consumption by One-Fifth ASAP: Two Dozen Water Agencies have Ordered Water Rationing (Kelly Zito, SanFranciscoChronicle)

(Feb. 28, 2009, Kelly Zito, The San Francisco Chronicle)
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger declared a statewide drought emergency Friday, urging cities to cut their use of water 20 percent and paving the way for projects such as desalination plants and water recycling projects to bypass standard environmental reviews.
Despite heavy rainstorms this month, state officials say California’s water [...]

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New York Drinking Water Supply Under Threat: Drilling for Natural Gas could Cause Water Pollution Cavity; Marcellus Shale Gas Layer could Contain 400 Trillion Cubic Feet of Gas = 20 Years Total US Production (AlterNet)

(Feb. 27, 2009, AlterNet)
The state has done little to study the impacts drilling might have on water supplies and is unprepared to treat the waste water it produces.
Got bubbles? Alarms have been ringing for months about the risk that natural gas drilling poses to drinking water supplies, but recent reports of water contamination just [...]

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Borrowing WaterThe China South-to-North Water Transfer, Mao Zedong and The Rise of the “Dam Migrants”: 12.5M Farmers Relocated; 86K Dams Since 1949 (Reuters)

(Feb. 27, 2009, Reuters)
“The south has plenty of water and the north lacks it, so if possible why not borrow some?” China’s revolutionary communist leader Mao Zedong said in 1952.
That probably seemed a great idea at the time.
But it is causing pollution as well as discontent among farmers facing forced resettlement to make way for a mammoth construction to [...]

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New Ceres/ Pacific Institute Report on Water Scarcity, Climate ChangeDownload PDF (Ceres)

(Feb. 26, 2009, Ceres)
Global climate change is exacerbating water scarcity problems around the world, yet few businesses and investors are paying attention to this growing financial threat, according to a report issued today by Ceres and the Pacific Institute.
Water is crucial for the global economy – driving every industry from agriculture to electric power to [...]

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Water and Our Future — A Lot Less of It to Go Around, A Lot More Money to Have It at All; Metropolitan Water District of Southern California Depleted Water Reserves at Rate of 523M Gallons of Water per Day in 2008; Population Grows by 200,000 Per Year in Service Area (MercuryNews)

(Feb. 26, 2009, The Mercury News)

In March, after a series of cold winter storms, the snowpack in the Sierra Nevada was above normal. That seemed to be good news for California’s water supply, which relies heavily on Sierra Nevada snow.
But after a record heat wave in the early spring, it was as if the winter’s [...]

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RED ALERT: Pat Mulroy’s Battle for Water in Las Vegas: Lake Mead Acquifer Depleted and the $3.5 Billion 327-Mile Water Pipeline; Piecemeal Water Industry Beast Pressuring Mulroy to Quit; Shasta Lake, California’s Biggest Reservoir, Only 1/3rd Full; Los Angeles Pay 7,000 Farmers to Leave Land Fallow (Bloomberg)

(Feb. 26, 2009, Bloomberg News)
On a cloudless December day in the Nevada desert, workers in white hard hats descend into a 30- foot-wide shaft next to Lake Mead.
As they’ve been doing since June, they’ll blast and dig straight down into the limestone surrounding the reservoir that supplies 90 percent of Las Vegas’s water. In September, [...]

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Water Crisis Deepest & Ever-Deepening Dilemma in India (CentralChronicle)

(Feb. 20, 2009, Central Chronicle)
If we don’t change our lifestyle and careless attitude towards Mother Nature, India will certainly experience severe water stress by 2020.- Satish Kumar Singh
Water catastrophe is now common phenomenon in every nook and corner of India. Day by day its graveness is mounting. Even people are killing one another on the [...]

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Climate Change, Drought and Collapse: Many of the World’s Lakes Becoming Deserts, Says Maude Barlow (WaterDrop)

(Feb. 20, 2009, WaterDrop)
According to Maude Barlow, the senior water advisor on water to the president of the United Nations General Assembly, Australia, Europe, India, China and Africa’s lakes are quickly being replaced by deserts. She also states that water systems in North and Central America are continuously being degraded to the point of collapse.
Barlow [...]

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Water Rationing Nears — We’re D-O-N-E, says Farmer: 2 Trillion Gallons of Water Delivered from California Delta to East Bay Cities Each Year (ContraCostaTimes)

(Feb. 20, 2009, Contra Costa Times)

The Contra Costa Water District’s 500,000 customers likely will face mandatory water rationing in the coming months and some of the biggest farms in the state may get no water at all, water managers said Friday.
The cuts to water supplies across the state are in response to what is shaping [...]

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Maude Barlow Interview: Water “Ignored in Climate Change Debate“; Governments can “Provide Water Perfectly Well“; I’m “against Privatization” (Aquadoc, WaterWired)

(Feb. 20, 2009, Aquadoc, WaterWired)
I found this interview with Maude Barlow on EurActiv.com (thanks to WaterSISWEB). I was ready to have my head explode but was quite (pleasantly?) surprised; she did not seem misinformed about some basic water facts.  No “New Mexico has a 10-year supply of water left.”
There was one thread I found especially puzzling:
We need [...]

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The “Soft Path” for Water — Avoiding the Unmanageable and Managing the Unavoidable: Interview with Peter Gleick (Tara Lohan, TheNation)

(Feb. 16, 2009, Tara Lohan, The Nation)
If you’ve read anything about the global water crisis, you’ve likely read a quote from Dr. Peter Gleick, founder and president of the Pacific Institute, and one of the world’s leading water experts. His name has become as ubiquitous as drought itself, which is suddenly making major headlines. [...]

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Rethinking Hydrophilanthropy: 1) Altruistic Concern for Our Water 2) and Respect for Its Importance and Healing Power (Aguadoc, WaterWired)

(Feb. 16, 2009, Aquadoc, WaterWired)

Sometimes ESPN gets it right. Amid the roiling sea of self-deprecating anchors, narcissistic athletes, bloviating analysts, interminable slam dunks, and sports shills masquerading as journalists, there sometimes appears an island of thoughtfulness and compassion.
One such island was spotted on SportsCenter yesterday morning. There was piece on a philanthropic organization, Project Healing Waters, that takes injured vets and teaches [...]

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You Can’t Rely on the Heavens for Rain: Level 1 Emergency Declared in China: Worst Drought in 50 Years (Economist)

(Feb. 12, 2009, The Economist)
AS CHINA’S 15-day lunar new year holiday began, Wen Jiabao, China’s prime minister, was in the plush Swiss resort of Davos, hobnobbing with other global powerbrokers. Towards the end of the holiday on February 8th, he appeared in a very different setting. Sporting a pair of smart white trainers, he strode [...]

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RED ALERT: 12 Options for Dealing with Water War in North America: The Rise of Water Demand and Water Protectionism; Chicago Draws 2Bn Gallons of Water Per Day from Great Lakes; Bottled Water Companies Exempt from Great Lakes Compact; No Big Water Projects in Obama’s Stimulus Bill; Water Conservation and Re-use NOT at Forefront (Max Deveson, BBCNews)

(Feb. 13, 2009, Max Deveson, BBC News)
The arid states of America’s south-west have been getting drier in recent years.
Since 2000, the Colorado River – which provides water for seven US states in the region – has carried less water than at any time in recorded history.
And while the drought is worsening, the demand for water [...]

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Worst Drought Since 50’s in China: Surface Water Per Capita 1/4 Global Average; Tibet has 30% of China’s Water Supply!!! (Ken Pomeranz, ChinaBeat)

(Feb. 12, 2009, Ken Pomeranz, The China Beat)
The Chinese droughts have just begun to move onto the front pages of the world’s newspapers, but the droughts are just the latest sign of much more dire warnings of water woes in China. Some China experts are talking about this (see, for instance, today’s event at the [...]

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Going on a Water Budget: For Many, It Just Means “Spending” More, or “Using” More Water, Rather (Alternet)

(Feb. 11, 2009, Alternet)

Just as the economic evidence shows that we’re in a recession, the scientific evidence shows that climate change will affect our natural resources.
One logical response to the constant news of the economic recession is cutting back on discretionary purchases and developing a household budget.  That is, if we know that times are [...]

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India Water Crisis: Economic Water Scarcity Equal to, If Not Greater, than Physical Water Scarcity, says World Bank Study (ChennaiOnline)

(Feb. 10, 2009, ChennaiOnline)
India is expected to experience severe water stress by 2020 with the per capita availability of water projected to be less than 1,000 cubic metres.
Indian water scenario was a matter of grave concern, as 85 per cent of water was used for agriculture, 10 per cent for industry and five per [...]

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Peak Water Gaining Strong Currency, Says Peter Gleick (NewSecurityBeat)

(Feb. 5, 2009, TheNewSecurityBeat)

“The concept of ‘peak water’ is very analogous to peak oil…we’re using fossil groundwater. That is, we’re pumping groundwater faster than nature naturally recharges it,” says Peter Gleick in this short expert analysis from the Environmental Change and Security Program. Gleick, president and co-founder of the Pacific Institute and author of the [...]

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German Researchers Mapping World’s Water Supply: Big Trouble in Little World (Planetizen)

(Feb. 6, 2009, Planetizen)

As long as temperatures, population, and industrialization continue rising, the earth’s water supply is in big trouble, as mapped here by German researchers.
“These projections of per-capita water availability were made by Martina Floerke and colleagues at the University of Kassel in Germany.
They combined different types of forecast to obtain their results. A [...]

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New 26-Minute KQED Overview of California Water IssuesVideo (Aguanomics)

(Feb. 6, 2009, Aguanomics)
This 26 minute PBS video is excellent for its overview of California water issues. They interview farmers in the Central Valley (”protect our way of life”), enviros (”we can’t keep taking water from nature”) and have a good overview of the technology (water recycling, reverse osmosis, etc.) What do they forget to [...]

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Water Issue Moves Front and Center: A Human Right or a Commodity? (Sassy Smallman, SeacoastOnline)

(Feb. 5, 2009, Seacoast Online)

The subject is water — locally, nationally, internationally. The issue isn’t new but it is definitely moving front and center these days.
Ecologists worldwide are now using the term “peak water” in the same way as the phrase “peak oil” came into common parlance over a decade ago. Back in the year [...]

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Water Agencies Vs. Farmers in Ojai Valley, California (VenturaRiverEcosystem)

(Feb. 3, 2009, Ventura River Ecosystem)
According to an article in the Ojai Valley News, the current drought and new water pricing is creating tension between water agencies and farmers. When wells run dry, growers have become accustomed to subsidized water imported from Lake Casitas. But with rate increases intended to cover the true cost of [...]

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Napa, California Now Paying $3,140 Per AF (Acre Foot of Water) to Yountville (Aguanomics)

(Feb. 4, 2009, Aguanomics)
“The [Napa, California city] council unanimously approved paying Yountville $3.45 million for the permanent rights to 1,100 acre feet from the vast State Water Project. The city, which uses about 15,500 acre feet annually, already has rights to 20,800 acre feet each year.”
This price for permanent water rights is equal to an [...]

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