leakbird logo

LeakBird

Conserving Water, One Toilet At A Time

Entries Tagged ‘peter gleick’

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 [...]

Leave a Comment

Smart Grid for Water would Save the US 30% to 50% of Its Water Supply Every Year, Says Mark Modzelewski (BusinessInsider)

(March 5, 2009, Business Insider)
While we don’t have a smart grid for electricity in place yet, there’s already talks that we need a smart grid for water. Implementing a smarter system that could monitor water usage would save the the US as much as 30% to 50% of its water used each year, estimates Mark [...]

Leave a Comment

Diminishing Water Supply in California Forces Realization of Smarter Water Usage Re Fixtures, Appliances: Water Agencies Looking for Every Advantage; Customers Now Making First Move, Not Waiting for Subsidy; However, Switching to a New High-Tech Toilet Costs $550 on Average!!! (Kelly Zito, SanFranciscoChronicle)

(Feb. 27, 2009, Kelly Zito, The San Francisco Chronicle)
The company has a gallery in New York’s tony SoHo district; one of it’s recent releases is named “Gwyneth”; it has near-cult status among the eco-affluent (and Google).
We’re talking about a toilet here.
Specifically, the Toto toilet – a water-efficient commode made by Japanese company founded in 1917.
The [...]

Comments (1)

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 [...]

Comments (2)

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. [...]

Leave a Comment

Bigfoot Came from the Water: Tools for Your Corporate Water Footprint, “Water Offset” Projects and Water Embedding Methods (Alexandra Alter, WallStreetJournal)

(Feb. 17, 2009, The Wall Street Journal)
Taking a Cue From Carbon Tracking, Companies and Conservationists Tally Hidden Sources of Consumption
It takes roughly 20 gallons of water to make a pint of beer, as much as 132 gallons of water to make a 2-liter bottle of soda, and about 500 gallons, including water used to grow, [...]

Leave a Comment

Raging Desal Debate from NoCal to SoCal: Several Big Milk Straws for You and Me? (Kelly Zito, SanFranciscoChronicle)

(Feb. 15, 2009, Kelly Zito, The San Francisco Chronicle)

Is it time to stick a straw into the Pacific Ocean?
About 20 water agencies up and down the California coast seem to think so.
From Marin County to San Diego, small and large projects that turn seawater into tap water are gaining favor, propelled by events unprecedented in [...]

Leave a Comment

Water Efficiency Leads to Energy Efficiency, Says Peter Gleick; Water Transportation, Storage, Treatment Account for 19% of California’s Electricity Consumption!!! (Ben Block, WorldWatch)

(Feb. 11, 2009, Ben Block, WorldWatch)
In regions where pumping and distributing water requires significant electricity use, policies that lead to reduced water consumption could address climate change more efficiently than requiring businesses and households to use less energy, according to water expert Peter Gleick.
“Some of the cheapest greenhouse gas emission reductions available seem to be [...]

Leave a Comment

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 [...]

Leave a Comment

Peter Gleick to Present The World’s Water 2008-2009 Biannual Report Feb. 4: Peak Water and Where We’re Headed (WorldChanging)

(Jan. 29, 2009, WorldChanging)
Looking for a way to update yourself on the state of the world’s water? On Wed., Feb. 4, Peter Gleick, one of the world’s leading authorities on water issues, will present The World’s Water 2008-2009 biannual report. This volume provides up-to-date information and analysis on water topics such as peak water, how [...]

Leave a Comment

US Food Price Increases Due to Water Scarcity to Precede Fed Inflation (LeakBird)

(Photo Courtesy of Old-Photos.Blogspot.com)
Drought and water shortages may drive up the cost of food in America this year, before the Fed’s printing press can even produce symptoms of inflation. Though Peter Gleick may focus on “water footprinting”, David Zetland says it’s not the core issue.
The core issue is price. And price needs to reflect water’s [...]

Comments (2)

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 [...]

Leave a Comment

Agro for Ag: Water Footprinting and 225 Gallons of Water to Produce a Glass of Orange Juice (TimesOnline)

(Jan. 22, 2009, The Times Online)
A swelling global population, changing diets and mankind’s expanding “water footprint” could be bringing an end to the era of cheap water.
The warnings, in an annual report by the Pacific Institute in California, come as ecologists have begun adopting the term “peak ecological water” — the point where, like the [...]

Leave a Comment

New Peter Gleick/ Pacific Institute Study: Peak Water and China (PacificInstitute)

(Jan. 13, 2009, Pacific Institute)
Are we running out of water?
“Is there such a thing as ‘peak water’? There is a vast amount of water on the planet—but we are facing a crisis of running out of sustainably managed water,” said Dr. Peter Gleick, president of the Pacific Institute. “Humans already appropriate over 50% of [...]

Leave a Comment

Peter Gleick should be White House Water Advisor (WaterWired)

(Jan. 16, 2009, WaterWired)
On January 9 Peter Gleick of the Pacific Institute gave presentations to both the House of Representatives and the Senate. The title: Water and Climate Change: Managing Unavoidable Impacts; Avoiding Unmanageable Impacts.
His conclusions:

Impacts of climate change on water systems are already occurring
Both mitigation and adaptation are needed
Recommendations to water managers have been available [...]

Comments (10)

Oil and Water Don’t Mix: Speaking Peak Water (UrbanWorkBench)

(Jan. 14, 2009, Urban Work Bench)
Over at Aguanomics there is a guest post by Damian Bickett, a PhD student from University of California Berkley. In this post Damian discusses the use of the term “Peak Water” in a book  by Peter Gleick (among others) of the Pacific Institute. You can read the whole post here, [...]

Leave a Comment

Peter Gleick (Video): Water Scarcity NOT the Problem in California (AlterNet)

(Jan. 6, 2009, AlterNet)

What do the water crisis, Dante’s Inferno, Hollywood movies, Sandra Bullock, the Mars Rover, cholera, have in common?  Peter Gleick of the Pacific Institute , arguably America’s foremost water expert, connects the unlikely dots in this fascinating recent talk at UC Berkeley.
You can skip the introductory remarks and go to 20:00 to [...]

Leave a Comment

  
  • Subscribe To Feed

  •  In A Reader

     

     

    Enter your email address:

    Delivered by FeedBurner