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HOT TOPIC: Water Quality and Quantity Issues, News and UpdatesWater, water everywhere --- and not a drop to drink...” (from The Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Samuel Taylor Coleridge) Water – Quality & Quantity – A Very Hot Topic In 2006 the United Nations World Water Development Report described the state of water on our planet as a “crisis of governance.” While the world appears to have enough fresh water supply today, the issue is one of governance, as in water distribution, management and quality control practices. Water quality appears to be degrading in many areas, our monitoring tells us, and water quantity (supply) is a huge issue in many of the world’s regions. Due to a number of factors -- mismanagement, limited area resources, and environmental changes, some caused by climate change -- almost one-fifth of the planet’s population still lacks access to safe drinking water and 40 per cent of the world’s population lacks access to basic sanitation. Access to water is further restricted by national and governmental entities that regulate where the water flows, who has access and for what purpose the water is used. Water is also used as an economic, health and environmental weapon by the “haves” over the “have-nots.” Governments “determine who gets what water, when and how, and decide who has the right to water and related services,” said the report authors. Water availability is also related to a range of issues intimately connected to water, from health and food security to economic development, land use, and the preservation of the natural ecosystems on which the water resources depend. Water quality is declining in most regions of the Earth. Regional over- population, increased industrialization, absence of proper waste water treatment -- are all contributing to the emerging crisis. Poor water quality is a key cause of poor livelihood and health. An estimated 1.6 million lives (directly or indirectly connected to water quality issues and their related diseases) could be saved each year by providing more access to safe drinking water, sanitation and hygiene to the world’s poorest regions. Access to water is not only a Third World or emerging nations’ issue -- droughts in the U.S. Southeast and quantity issues in the Southwest and in California have brought conservation, control and distribution issues to the public’s attention in the past few years. Water in the United States is a key factor to residential and commercial development, economic stability and job growth – all issues which effect local and regional communities’ economic well-being. Water in the USA is critical to the health of agriculture and related industries. Corporations are in the spotlight for their use of water – advocates and third party researchers are developing “water footprints” (similar to “carbon footprints”) for leading companies, such as Coca Cola, Nestle and other water-intensive industries and sectors. The Editors of Accountability Central work to bring the many facets of Water issues -- especially quality and quantity -- into focus with news, commentary and research. Education on the issues, public discussion and rising concern can help to bring about real and positive changes and sensible and fair solutions to the problems at hand. Perhaps this public forum can help in some small way. The Institute maintains a robust focus on water issues and the key players in the INSIGHTS-edge (SM) Web-accessed knowledge management platform – click here for more information: www.gai-insightsedge.com Updated February 2010 |
Latest on Water - Quality & QuantityMarch 3, 2010 Water crisis could cause Indo-Pak war: KasuriSource:Daily News - PakistanLAHORE: Former foreign minister Khurshid Mehmood Kasuri has warned both Pakistan and India that a war could start if serious attention was not given to the issue of water crisis in the region. Addressing a press conference on... March 2, 2010 Companies Exposed to Water Risks Are Providing Investors With Too Little Data
Source:Social Funds.com
Global water scarcity has become a material business risk about which investors need information, to the extent that the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) included a reference to the issue in its recent interpretive... March 1, 2010 What lies beneath: Leaking underground tanks leave legacy of contaminationSource:Water World.comHonora Gilmore had looked forward to hosting Christmas dinner at her Upper Nazareth Township home last year, but a pungent diesel odor blanketing the neighborhood doused her holiday plans. The smell began in November as a passing... February 27, 2010 Below-normal water deliveries to Southern California still forecastSource:Los Angeles TimesIt may be raining and snowing, but water managers are still forecasting below-normal deliveries this year for the state system that helps supply Southern California. Storms have been filling Northern California's big federal... February 26, 2010 Drilling Could Threaten Drinking Water
Source:Food Safety News
Since 2008, natural gas drilling crews have been flocking to Marcellus Shale, a large rock bed that lies about 6,000 feet beneath New York, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Ohio. Geologists say it could be the most productive... February 25, 2010 Groups ID Toxic Coal Ash Sites in 14 States, Demand RegulationsSource:Environment News ServiceWASHINGTON, DC - Two environmental groups today identified 31 sites in 14 states contaminated with coal-ash waste containing arsenic, cadmium, lead, selenium, and other toxic metals that can cause cancer and neurological damage... February 25, 2010 Broad-Based Coalition of Environmentalists, Farmers, Business, Labor, and Water Agencies Formed to Support Water Bond on November BallotSource:PR NewswireToday the committee in support of the Safe, Clean & Reliable Drinking Water Supply Act of 2010 (water bond) on the November ballot announced the formation of a broad-based and diverse coalition of organizations supporting the... February 24, 2010 Yemen's water crisis eclipses al Qaeda threatSource:alsahwanetYemeni water trader Mohammed al-Tawwa runs his diesel pumps day and night, but gets less and less from his well in Sanaa, which experts say could become the world's first capital city to run dry. February 24, 2010 Shell halts Yampa water bidSource:Steamboat TodayShell Oil Co. said Tuesday that it is abandoning its quest for water rights on the Yampa River to develop oil shale production, citing delays in the project because of the global economic downturn. February 23, 2010 Water expert sees necessity of international coordinationSource:Billings GazetteThe arid West has long suffered disputes over water, but Mac McKee views the resource from a global perspective. And, according to the director of the Utah Water Research Laboratory at Utah State University in Logan, the earth’s... |
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