Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Monday, November 30, 2009

LA Times: Copenhagen's missing ingredient: water

Copenhagen's missing ingredient: water

 Scientists stress water's profound link with climate change, yet delegates at next week's conference have deleted water from the working draft of a binding environmental treaty. [read rest of article]

Friday, November 20, 2009

CDP Launches Water Disclosure Project

CDP Launches Water Disclosure Project

The Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) has launched a global water disclosure project to help businesses and institutional investors understand the risks and opportunities associated with water scarcity and other water-related issues, including greater demand for water, shrinking glaciers and changing precipitation patterns that are likely to result in drought and flooding. [Read rest of article]


Tuesday, November 17, 2009

E-N: Balancing water needs of aquifer's many users

Balancing water needs of aquifer's many users

Water restrictions put in place during this year's drought are nothing compared with those of the future if management of the Edwards Aquifer is not changed, scientists say in a new report.

In a worst-case scenario, pumping from the aquifer would have to be cut by as much as 97 percent during a drought to ensure the survival of endangered species dependent on flows of the Comal and San Marcos springs. [Read rest of article]

 

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Warmer Means Windier on World's Biggest Lake

Warmer Means Windier on World's Biggest Lake

 ScienceDaily (Nov. 15, 2009) — Rising water temperatures are kicking up more powerful winds on Lake Superior, with consequences for currents, biological cycles, pollution and more on the world's largest lake and its smaller brethren.  [Read rest of article]

Swiss device may lessen water woes

Swiss device may lessen water woes

 A person uses about 1.5 litres of water to wash his hands. This quantity can be reduced to one decilitre which is 10 times less," said Denis Crottet, the inventor of the system.
The device, which is internationally patented, produces a first flow which is a combination of water, soap and air. There is a gap before the second flow to allow cleaning of hands. The second flow contains only water for rinsing. "By controlling the mixing of soap, water and air, we avoid wastage of water," said Crottet. [Read rest of article]

Ponds 'caused Bangladesh arsenic'

Ponds 'caused Bangladesh arsenic' 

Man-made ponds may be responsible for widespread arsenic contamination of ground water affecting millions of people in Bangladesh, a new study says. [read rest of article]

Dominica signs deal to export drinking water

Dominica signs deal to export drinking water

The lush but poor Caribbean island of Dominica will allow an export company to ship billions of gallons of its river water to parched countries around the globe, officials said Saturday. [Read rest of article]

Holy water in the era of swine flu

Holy water in the era of swine flu: an electronic dispenser

Amid fears that religious ritual was eroding due to swine flu fears, an innovative Catholic from the town of Fornaci di Briosco in northern Italy has invented an electronic holy water dispenser. As Reuters first reported, inventor Luciano Marabese first developed the dispenser—which works similarly to soap dispensers, but instead spurts out holy water when parishioners wave a hand underneath—says he did so out of concern that swine flu was undermining the ritual of people dipping their hands into the font upon arrival and departure from church. [Read rest of article]

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Amnesty International: Israel rations Palestinians to trickle of water



Amnesty International has accused Israel of denying Palestinians the right to access adequate water by maintaining total control over the shared water resources and pursuing discriminatory policies. [read rest of article

LA Times: Nuclear scars: Tainted water runs beneath Nevada desert

Nuclear scars: Tainted water runs beneath Nevada desert

 The state faces a water crisis and population boom, but radioactive waste from the Nevada Test Site has polluted aquifers. [read rest of article]

 

Chicago Trib: Water on moon: Discovery intrigues scientists over possibility of life

Water on moon: Discovery intrigues scientists over possibility of life

 Scientists have found "significant" amounts of water in a crater at the moon's south pole, a major discovery that will dramatically revise the characterization of the moon as a dead world and probably make it a more attractive destination for human space missions.

"The moon is alive," declared Anthony Colaprete, the chief scientist for the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite mission. [read rest of article]

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

WILD9: Wilderness and Water Promises in the Land of the Maya

Wilderness and Water Promises in the Land of the Maya

Even without the dire spectre of climate change, "mitigation and adaptation will become fundamental if we want to have water enough for this and coming generations," said Omar Vidal, director of the World Wildlife Fund - Mexico.

Most of Mexico's watersheds have extraction rates above 40 percent and 101 major aquifers are now considered "over-exploited," he said. "Seventy percent of the Mexican population … are at great risk of water shortage." [Read entire article]

Monday, November 9, 2009

NYT: Afloat in the Ocean, Expanding Islands of Trash

Afloat in the Ocean, Expanding Islands of Trash 

ABOARD THE ALGUITA, 1,000 miles northeast of Hawaii — In this remote patch of the Pacific Ocean, hundreds of miles from any national boundary, the detritus of human life is collecting in a swirling current so large that it defies precise measurement. [Read rest of article]

AP: Cold Ocean Water to be Turned Into A/C

Cold Ocean Water to be Turned Into A/C

HONOLULU—The plan to pump frigid waters from the ocean's depths to air condition downtown Honolulu isn't a pipe dream, and it could reduce the state's dependence on fossil fuels while slashing power bills that are the highest in the nation.

The long-studied cooling project by Honolulu Seawater Air Conditioning would extend plumbing nearly 5 miles offshore, suck 45-degree water from 1,800 feet deep, circulate frosty water into buildings' existing A/C systems and then dump it back into the sea. [read rest of article]

ABC NEWS: Water Crisis at Heart of Yemen's Conflicts

Water Crisis at Heart of Yemen's Conflicts

Water Shortages Fuel Conflicts in Yemen, Already on the Brink of Failure

While domestic insurgencies chip away at the control of Yemen's central government and an Al Qaeda branch gains strength in regions beyond the government's reach, another crisis — one that affects Yemen's entire population — has the potential to contribute to the country's instability and potential trajectory toward failure. Yemen is running out of water – fast. [read rest of article]

 

 

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Reuters: Israeli firms aim to plug world's water leaks

Israeli firms aim to plug world's water leaks

A World Bank study in 2006 showed water lost in the system before it reaches the customer -- known as "non-revenue water" -- costs utilities at least $14 billion worldwide every year, largely from leaky pipes and poor maintenance.

Most of the loss is in developing countries: 12 billion gallons (45 million cubic meters) of water are lost daily, enough to serve nearly 200 million people, the study said. [Read rest of Article]

 

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Wired: EPA Tests Porous Pavement, Greener Gardens

EPA Tests Porous Pavement, Greener Gardens

As stormwater runoff endangers the world’s water supply, the EPA is busy planting gardens and repaving its parking lots.

Don’t worry — it’s not just an attempt to beautify the agency’s field offices in Edison, New Jersey. The renovations are being done in the name of science, with a field test of runoff-reducing pavements and installation of water-cleansing rain gardens. The Environmental Protection Agency is using the trials to see how pavement and plant choices can help filter pollutants out of rain water before it reenters the water supply. [read rest of article]

 

Reuters: San Antonio Water System Joins Energy Research Alliance of San Antonio

San Antonio Water System Joins Energy Research Alliance of San Antonio

 Dedicated to exploring new and innovative energy solutions, San Antonio Water System (SAWS) announced today it joined the Energy Research Alliance of San Antonio established in June by The University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA), Southwest Research Institute® (SwRI) and CPS Energy. [read rest of article]

 

Robot Fish to Better Monitor Water Quality

Robot Fish to Better Monitor Water Quality

An ecologist and an engineer at Michigan State University are working together to create robot fish that can better monitor various factors in aquatic environments. [Read Rest of article]

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Chicago Trib: Brewers worry that national water shortages will raise prices

Brewers worry that national water shortages will raise prices

MILWAUKEE: Even a hint of water scarcity is enough to drive a brewer to drink.

"Simply put, beer is 92 percent water," said Wisconsin Commerce Secretary Richard Leinenkugel, who hails from one of the nation's oldest breweries, the Jacob Leinenkugel Brewing Co. [read rest of article]

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Green, Inc.: Water Use by Solar Projects Intensifies

Water Use by Solar Projects Intensifies

The West’s water wars are likely to intensify with Pacific Gas and Electric’s announcement Monday that the utility will buy 500 megawatts of electricity from two solar power plant projects to be built in the California desert.

The Genesis Solar Energy Project would consume an estimated 536 million gallons of water a year while the Mojave Solar Project would pump 705 million gallons annually for power plant cooling, according to applications filed with the California Energy Commission.

With 35 big solar farm projects undergoing licensing or planned for arid regions of California alone, water is emerging as a contentious issue. [read rest of article]

Monday, October 26, 2009

Clean Technology Forum



This is video from the main segment of the Clean Tech Forum held in San Antonio on Sept. 16, and livecast to the Web by NOWCastSA.

The speakers were: San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro; Steve Bartley, Interim General Manager, CPS Energy; Patrick Moore, Co-Chair, Clean and Safe Energy Coalition (CASEnergy); Craig Severance,Author, Business Risks & Costs of New Nuclear Power and Arjun Makhijani, President, Institute for Energy & Environmental Research.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

ABC NEws: From Ecological Soviet-Era Ruin, a Sea Is Reborn

From Ecological Soviet-Era Ruin, a Sea Is Reborn

Standing on the shore under the relentless Central Asian sun, Badarkhan Prikeyev drew on a cigarette and squinted into the distance as one fishing boat after another returned with the day's catch.

Until recently, this spot where the fish merchant was standing, in a man-made desert at the edge of nowhere, represented one of the world's worst environmental calamities.

Now fresh water was lapping at his boots, proclaiming an environmental miracle — the return of the Aral Sea. [Read rest of article]

Saturday, October 24, 2009

time4climatejustice

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Democracy Now!: Toxic Waters

Toxic Waters: Regulatory Absence Allows Chemical, Coal and Farm Industries to Pollute US Water Supplies


Amy Goodman speaks to New York Times reporter Charles Duhigg about the latest in his investigative series “Toxic Waters,” which examines the worsening pollution in the nation’s water systems. [read transcript]

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

BBC: China moves 330,000 in water plan

China moves 330,000 in water plan 

China has begun to resettle 330,000 people to make way for a project to divert water from the south of the country to the north, state media say.  [read rest of article]

Monday, October 19, 2009

NPR: How Safe Is Your Drinking Water?

How Safe Is Your Drinking Water?

An estimated one in 10 Americans have been exposed to drinking water that contains dangerous chemicals, parasites, bacteria or viruses, or fails to meet federal health standards. Part of the problem, says journalist Charles Duhigg, is that water-pollution laws are not being enforced. [listen to the segment on Terry Gross - Fresh Air]

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Water is as good a comfort food as chocolate, says study

Mother Nature Network:
Water is as good a comfort food as chocolate, says study

Like water for chocolate? Researchers now say that water may be just as effective a comfort food as chocolate, but without the calories. [read rest of article]

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

USA Today: More projects return America's rivers to their natural state

More projects return America's rivers to their natural state

 Texas. About 31 miles of the San Antonio River were channelized by the Army Corps of Engineers in a project that started in 1957, and "it absolutely does what it was designed to do: It protects our communities from flooding," says Steven Schaner, spokesman for the San Antonio River Authority. Turning the San Antonio into what Schaner describes as a "trapezoidal drainage ditch" came with major effects on the river's ecosystem.

Working with the Army Corps, the authority embarked on the $272 million restoration of 8 miles of the river south of downtown San Antonio. River meanders will be returned, as will shallow rapids important for fish. About 20,000 trees will be planted. [read rest of article]

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Water shortages causes 100,000 to flee homes in Iraq: UN

Water shortages causes 100,000 to flee homes in Iraq: UN

PARIS — More than 100,000 people in northern Iraq have abandoned their homes since 2005 because of water stress, after drought and over-extraction of groundwater caused the collapse of an ancient water system, UNESCO said on Tuesday. [read rest of article]

Cleansing the Air at the Expense of Waterways

Cleansing the Air at the Expense of Waterways

Even as a growing number of coal-burning power plants around the nation have moved to reduce their air emissions, many of them are creating another problem: water pollution. Power plants are the nation’s biggest producer of toxic waste, surpassing industries like plastic and paint manufacturing and chemical plants, according to a New York Times analysis of Environmental Protection Agency data. [read rest of article]

Monday, October 12, 2009

video: Sinkhole Recharge

Sinkhole recharge

A series of caves in Stone Oak City Park are part of the recharge zone for the Edwards Aquifer. [View video; sorry, can't embed it!]

Corpus Christi: Red tide found in Packery Channel

Red tide found in Packery Channel

— Red tide was detected late Thursday and early Friday at the mouth of Packery Channel and between the Port Aransas jetties, said a biologist with the Texas Parks & Wildlife Department.

Concentrations of the toxic algae were not high enough to kill fish, but were dense enough to cause minor symptoms such as coughing, throat irritation and watery eyes in people on the beach and jetties, said Meridith Byrd, the department’s Hazardous Algae Bloom response coordinator. [read rest of article]

Sunday, October 11, 2009

LA Times: Yemen water crisis builds

Yemen water crisis builds

The resource's scarcity in rural areas sends migrants to swell the capital, which may run out by 2025. [read rest of article]

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Montreal Gazette: Fight poverty - add water

Fight poverty - add water

Looking up at the full moon, it's hard to imagine two more different realities: Billionaire Quebec impresario/space tourist Guy Laliberté is up there somewhere - possibly wearing a red clown's nose - floating in zero gravity on a poetic mission about water conservation, while people down here are gathered in a dirt field, waiting for actors to take to a makeshift stage.

The play, also focused on the need for clean drinking water, will be a rare break for people of San Luis, who work hard just to get by. (A third of Nicaraguans live on less than $2 a day). [read rest of article]

Circus Billionaire Hosts Space Show About Water

Canadian space tourist and circus billionaire Guy Laliberte mixed star power, science lectures, music and poetry with water, hosting a TV/Internet show from the International Space Station.

SA-EN: Clean energy, clean water

Clean energy, clean water
By Tom Fowler - Houston Chronicle

HOUSTON — A Texas firm plans to use power generated by the Gulf of Mexico's waves to make its salty water drinkable.

Renew Blue Inc. says its project can address two global problems — climate change and scarce drinking water — by using clean energy to turn seawater to freshwater. [read rest of article]

Friday, October 9, 2009

NASA craft smacks the moon in quest for water

NASA craft smacks the moon in quest for water Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

A NASA rocket plowed into a crater on the moon this morning, looking for evidence that water has been lying hidden in the lunar wasteland for billions of years. [read rest of article]

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

WWF: Wealthy world at risk from water woes elsewhere

Wealthy world at risk from water woes elsewhere

 While German households use 124 litres of water a day directly, individual Germans use 5288 litres of water a day when the water requirements of producing their food, clothes and other consumption items are included.

The report calculated Germany’s water footprint at 159.5 cubic kilometres of water annually, with only half coming from German rain and rivers. [read rest of article]

Minn Post: Noted lecturers grapple with water, 'the uncertain resource'

Noted lecturers grapple with water, 'the uncertain resource'

 "It's certainly no coincidence that whenever civilizations and human activity began, it is essentially because of access to water," Pachauri explained at the start of his address. "And it's also no coincidence that those societies which ran into problems in the management of their water resources — all had to encounter natural debacles that led to the depletion or vanishing of water resources — are the societies that actually failed." [read rest of article]

 

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

NYT: Regulators Plan to Study Health Risks of Atrazine

Regulators Plan to Study Health Risks of Atrazine
By CHARLES DUHIGG 

The Environmental Protection Agency plans to conduct a new study about the potential health risks of atrazine, a widely used weedkiller that recent research suggests may be more dangerous to humans than previously thought.

Atrazine — a herbicide often used on corn fields, golf courses and even lawns — has become one of the most common contaminants in American drinking water.  [read rest of article]

Going green by growing green

Going green by growing green

 Note: Dr. Murray has just been confirmed as one of the presenters at the Water Symposium!

When San Antonio researcher Kyle Murray peers into the future, he sees the land of black gold turning bright green. Algae green. Murray, an assistant professor of geology at the University of Texas at San Antonio, thinks the city is perfectly poised to become a research and production hotbed for literally one of the greenest fuels around, mined from the slippery marine life that thrives in the shallow ponds and warm, sunny weather that are hallmarks of this region. [read rest of article]

 

Africa Climate Change Threatens Life and Health of Maasai Women

Africa Climate Change Threatens Life and Health of Maasai Women

Kajiado, Kenya: The Maasai are struggling with frequent water shortages which are threatening their way of life. But one women’s group is taking action. [read rest of article]

Monday, October 5, 2009

SA-EN: Big decisions on energy, water dominate mayor's agenda

Big decisions on energy, water dominate mayor's agenda
Scott Stroud

Mayor Julián Castro didn't set out to be “the utility mayor,” but circumstances beyond his control have led him in that direction.

Castro inherited the city's $5.2 billion nuclear decision, and while that work is anything but finished, he's already turning toward another pressing need the city faces — making sure San Antonians have enough water to slake our growing thirst. [read rest of column]

SA-EN: Rain in Brackenridge Park Video



Rains ravaged the area over the weekend, resulting in flash flooding, power outages and more than a few high water rescues. [read rest of article]

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Common Dreams: UN Warns of 70 Percent Desertification by 2025

UN Warns of 70 Percent Desertification by 2025

BUENOS AIRES - Drought could parch close to 70 percent of the planet's soil by 2025 unless countries implement policies to slow desertification, a senior United Nations official has warned. [read rest of article]

TIME: World Water Crisis

World Water Crisis
 
In the extraordinary new book Blue Planet Run, hundreds of photographers from all over the world track mankind's vital race to provide safe drinking water to the one billion people who lack it. Watch a slide show of water photos   or download a free copy of the book in PDF format.

Book Review: 'Following the Water': a naturalist's love affair with swamps and their creatures

'Following the Water': a naturalist's love affair with swamps and their creatures

"Following the Water — a Hydromancer's Notebook" by MacArthur "genius grant" award winner David M. Carroll recounts the author's lifelong obsession with the threatened wetlands of his New England home. [read rest of review in the Seattle Times]

Saturday, October 3, 2009

The Nation:The Coalfield Uprising

The Coalfield Uprising
By Jeff Biggers

When the Environmental Protection Agency declared this year on September 11 that all pending mountaintop removal mining permits in four Appalachian states stood in violation of the Clean Water Act and required further review, Lora Webb didn’t have time to join in any celebrations. As she and her husband, Steve, a coal miner, packed up their possessions and left his family’s ancestral property outside Lindytown, West Virginia, Lora was more concerned about finding a place to sleep that night. [read rest of article]

AP: Trampling blamed for Alaska walrus deaths

Trampling blamed for Alaska walrus deaths
By Dan Joling - Associated Press 
 
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Trampling likely killed 131 mostly young walruses forced onto the northwest coast of Alaska by a loss of sea ice, according to a preliminary report released Thursday. [read rest of article]

 

NYT Green Blog: Solar Stirs Water Wars in the West

Solar Stirs Water Wars in the West

. . . a water war is breaking out in the desert Southwest over the dozens of large-scale solar power plants planned for the region.

Depending on the technology used, some solar farms can consume more than a billion gallons of water a year in regions that receive three or four inches of rain annually. [read rest of article]

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

SA-EN: Hardbergers travel miles in boat called Aimless

Hardbergers travel miles in boat called Aimless By Phil Hardberger     Special to the Express-News 

Editor's note: After Phil Hardberger ended his term as San Antonio mayor, the veteran sailor and his wife, Linda, set off on a trip through middle America, from Port Aransas to the shores of Lake Michigan, finding solitude and friends along the way as they traveled upriver in a boat named Aimless.

HOLLAND, MICH. — Fall comes early in these high latitudes. The trees are already splashed with little dabs of yellow, oranges, reds and purple. Although we are in middle America, we are at 43 degrees of latitude, as high as Boston on the map. Mornings are cold, sweaters part of our normal dress. We've come 2,481 nautical miles since leaving Port Aransas. Aimless, our 42-foot trawler, runs at 9 knots per hour (10 mph), so these distances take a while — 2 1/2 months in our case. Slow travel brings its rewards. You absorb the country, accents changing with the temperature. [read rest of article]

SA-EN: Seeing Rio Grande as uniter, not divider

Seeing Rio Grande as uniter, not divider
By Colin McDonald - Express-News 
 
GUERRERO VIEJO, Mexico — As soon as he stepped onto the mud shore below the church ruins, Eric Ellman could visualize the party.

The racers would storm across the Rio Grande, landing their kayaks and canoes to the cheers of fans lining the streets of this 200-year-old, half-sunken and abandoned town now exposed by a drought-lowered lake.
After an awards ceremony in front of the church’s cleaned-up facade, camps would be set up. A band would play. Where cows now stood, couples would dance under a star-studded sky.

The Rio Grande again would be a uniting element, not just a heavily patrolled boundary be tween two impoverished, semi-isolated populations. [read rest of article]
 

NYT: Alternative Energy Projects Stumble on a Need for Water

Alternative Energy Projects Stumble on a Need for Water
By TODD WOODY, New York Times

AMARGOSA VALLEY, Nev. — In a rural corner of Nevada reeling from the recession, a bit of salvation seemed to arrive last year. A German developer, Solar Millennium, announced plans to build two large solar farms here that would harness the sun to generate electricity, creating hundreds of jobs.

But then things got messy. The company revealed that its preferred method of cooling the power plants would consume 1.3 billion gallons of water a year, about 20 percent of this desert valley’s available water. [read rest of article]