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Conserving Water, One Toilet At A Time

Entries Tagged ‘crisis’

California Too Broke to Fund Water Transfers Needed in Drought (Jim Downing, SacramentoBee)

(May 12, 2009, Jim Downing, The Sacramento Bee)
As another summer of drought approaches, hundreds of thousands of acres of San Joaquin Valley farmland are expected to be fallowed, and much of urban California faces 20 percent water cutbacks.
But in the Sacramento Valley, rice farmers have been busy for weeks spreading water 6 inches deep over [...]

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Water Crisis in Central Valley NOT Water Supply Related (CaliforniaProgressReport)

(May 11, 2009, The California Progress Report)
The San Joaquin Valley has been ground zero in the current economic recession. News outlets have run a number of stories about food banks running out of supplies and residents leaving their hometowns in search of work on the East Coast.
Water contractors have claimed that recent environmental regulations [...]

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California Drought Update: Due to Recent Storms, Feds Allocate 10% of Government Entitled Water to Farmers in California (NewYorkTimes)

(April 22, 2009, The New York Times)
Farmers in the state’s drought-stricken agricultural basin will finally get a meager supply of federal water to help irrigate crops this summer. Federal officials said storms in March allowed them to increase the amount of water sent to customers south of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. Water districts that supply [...]

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Crumbling US Water Infrastructure: Aging of Water Mains is Becoming Hard to Ignore (NewYorkTimes)

(April 17, 2009, The New York Times)
There are an estimated 240,000 water main breaks each year in the United States, according to the Environmental Protection Agency’s Aging Water Infrastructure Research Program, and some water experts fear that the problem is getting worse.
(Original Article Here)

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RED ALERT: 75% Chance of Mandatory Water Rationing in San Diego by July 1, 2009: Initial Penalties to be Price-Based; Flow Restrictors to be Put on Violator’s Houses!!!; Mayor Claims Families’ Water Use down 40% over Last Two Years (MSNBC)

(March 7, 2009, MSNBC)
Using the back yard of a Tierrasanta resident as a backdrop, Mayor Jerry Sanders called on San Diegans to get serious about water conservation.
Sanders revealed what he has done personally to conserve and showed clear disappointment in the overall efforts of San Diegans.
“Despite some successes, we still continue to fall shrt of [...]

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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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RED ALERT: Where the Heck are My Hectares?: 400 Mile Central Valley “Salad Bowl” in State of ABSOLUTE EMERGENCY; No Water = No Almond Trees = No Bee Colonies = No Pollination (Dan Gleister, Guardian)

(Feb. 4, 2009, Dan Gleister, Guardian)
Bill Diedrich, a fourth-generation almond grower in California’s Central Valley, expects that many of his trees won’t make it through the year. “It’s one of the grimmest water situations we’ve ever faced,” he said. “It’s an absolute emergency and anything to get water flowing quickly is needed.”
The 400-mile Central Valley [...]

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Unintended Consequences: Water Conservation Causes Stagnation in Pipes, Leads to More Pollution, Heavier Toll on Infrastructure… (EScienceNews)

(Jan. 28, 2009, E-Science News)
Scientists and engineers will face a host of obstacles over the next decade in providing clean water to millions of people caught up in a water shortage crisis, a panel of scientists and engineers said today at a briefing at the Broadcast Center of the National Press Building on the Final [...]

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Peak Water Equal Threat to Peak Oil: Crisis for Some, Opportunity for Others (Jeff St. John, GreenTechMedia)

(Jan. 23, 2009, Jeff St. John, GreenTechMedia)
The world’s poorest and richest nations alike need to find ways to conserve and use water more efficiently if they hope to avoid shortages and conflict, says noted water expert Peter Gleick.
The threat of “peak water” should be considered as big a threat – and opportunity – as the [...]

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Fiji sans Potable Water after Flooding: Japan Sends Boxes of Bottled Water (PortlandWaterBureau)

(Jan. 17, 2009, Portland Water Bureau)
The island nation of Fiji is in desperate need of clean drinking water after severe flooding left 11 dead and 9,000 people in evacuation centers. The flooding was caused by torrential rain and was the worst the country has seen in 40 years.
Fiji’s interim government has asked for international assistance.
Fiji’s Permanent [...]

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Middle Eastern Drought, Through the Lens of Israel’s Renewable Water (NourishingObscurity)

(Jan. 11, 2009, Nourishing Obscurity)
Putting aside military action, oil and gas for now, a good indicator of whether there is any form of cooperation in the middle-east can be seen through water.

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Bursting of Water Bubble in California Could Cost $500M in Restrictions, Mostly to Affect SoCal (Mercury News)

(Jan. 11, 2009, The Mercury News)

To understand how California reached its current water crisis, one could look for an analogy in the financial meltdown.
In both cases, credit or water once flowed easily: Four of the five years of highest water deliveries from the Delta’s two massive pumping plants were 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2006.
In both [...]

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