leakbird logo

LeakBird

Conserving Water, One Toilet At A Time

Entries Tagged ‘report’

Report: World’s Rivers Drying Up (FoxNews)

(April 22, 2009, Fox News)
The study examined stream flow in 925 of Earth’s largest rivers , and found significant change in about one third of them over the past 50 years.

(Original Article Here)

Leave a Comment

Study: Gray Water Recycling could Cut Residential Water Usage by 16% (LosAngelesTimes)

(April 19, 2009, The Los Angeles Times)
During a prolonged drought in the early 1990s, L.A.’s Department of Water and Power and Department of Public Works conducted an ambitious experiment. In eight homes, including those of several elected officials, they installed “gray water” equipment that diverted the outflows from washing machines, showers, bathtubs and bathroom sinks [...]

Leave a Comment

Report Says Use of Water, Energy Linked (HoustonChronicle)

(April 6, 2009, The Houston Chronicle)
A joint report from the University of Texas and an environmental group urges state planners to conserve both water and energy.
The report released Monday claims that improving water conservation will cut power demand and that upgrades in energy efficiency will decrease water needs, allowing Texas to utilize “finite supplies of [...]

Leave a Comment

Europe Living Beyond Its Water Means, Says New Report (NewYorkTimes)

(March 18, 2009, The New York Times)
Don’t expect the future to look much like the past, at least when it comes to the Earth’s fresh water supplies. That’s the message emerging from a major international meeting being held here this week.
More than 27,000 people — including government ministers from more than 120 countries — have [...]

Leave a Comment

You Never Want to Waste a Good (Water) Crisis: IBM’s Global Innovation Outlook Report on Strategic Water — PDF (GreenBiz)

(March 16, 2009, GreenBiz)
This report examines the opportunities and challenges of strategic water management. Five case studies provide perspectives from projects around the world.
Though it’s a worldwide entity, water is treated as a regional issue, IBM says. There is no global market and very little international exchange.
“Water is about quantity, quality, space and time,” says [...]

Leave a Comment

New Water Use Study: How Residents can Lower Their High Water Bills (OCRegister)

(March 10, 2009, The Orange County Register)
When Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger called on Californians to reduce water use in the face of severe drought conditions, 78 households in The Reserve neighborhood of San Clemente were resting easy.
Those residents had signed on to participate in The Reserve Outdoor Sustainability Project, a study measuring the effects of efficient [...]

Leave a Comment

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

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, [...]

Leave a Comment

‘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. [...]

Leave a Comment

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

BBC News Calls Water Crisis “Another Global Crisis”: Water Most Important DRIVER OF HUMAN DEVELOPMENT; UN Says Water Crisis NOT A Resource Crisis; By 2050, 6Bn could Face Water Scarcity (BBCNews)

(Feb. 2, 2009, BBC News)
If you look at the numbers, it is hard to see how many East African communities made it through the long drought of 2005 and 2006.
Among people who study human development, it is a widely-held view that each person needs about 20 litres of water each day for the basics – [...]

Leave a Comment

Great Doctoral Student Slideshow/ Powerpoint on Northern China’s Water Crisis (GreenLeapForward)

(Jan. 30, 2009, The Green Leap Forward)
Christine is a doctoral candidate in University of North Carolina’s program in environmental planning and policy and recently completed a Fulbright Fellowship at the Chinese Academy of Science’s Center for Chinese Agricultural Policy. Her doctoral dissertation examines the changing nature of irrigation governance in northern China.  Her expertise is [...]

Leave a Comment

US Water Systems Earn ‘D’ Grade: $2.2 Trillion to Fix ALL INFRASTRUCTURE (KansasCityStar)

(Jan. 27, 2009, The Kansas City Star)
America’s roads, public transit and aviation have gotten worse in the past four years. Water and sewage systems are dreadful. The basic physical backbone of American society is barely above failing, a report by top engineers says.
It’ll cost $2.2 trillion to fix America’s ailing infrastructure, according to highlights of [...]

Comments (2)

New Maude Barlow Narrative: The Tragedy of the Water Commons — Download PDF (Maude Barlow, OnTheCommons)

(Jan., 2009, OnTheCommons.org)

Download a New Report on Water Commons Principles
“Our Water Commons, Towards a New Freshwater Narrative” by Maude Barlow
In every corner of the globe, communities (not just human, but flora and fauna as well) are in a pitched battle against thirst. Thank you for your interest in learning more about the principles of the [...]

Leave a Comment

World Bank Report to China: Tighten Your Water Security Lest You Become Water-Stressed (ChinaNationalNews)

(Jan. 12, 2009, China National News)
China must overhaul its water management systems to provide better legal protection and more open competition for the increasingly scare resource, the World Bank said Monday.
‘For years, water shortages, pollution, and flooding have constrained growth and affected public health and welfare in many parts of China,’ the bank said in [...]

Leave a Comment

  
  • Subscribe To Feed

  •  In A Reader

     

     

    Enter your email address:

    Delivered by FeedBurner