Showing posts with label water management. Show all posts
Showing posts with label water management. Show all posts

GE is Helping Nestle to Save Millions of Gallons of Water

On the 40th anniversary of the Clean Water Act (CWA), it is fitting that we take a look at a stellar example of a business that with the help of GE, is saving more than seven million gallons of water per year. The CWA was passed 40 years ago on October 18th, 1972, it establishes the basic structure for regulating discharges of pollutants into U.S. waters. US corporations are increasingly looking to sustainable water management standards that go far beyond the statutes of the CWA.

GE, a leader in an advanced water-treatment chemical technology, is helping industry reduce their water consumption and discharge. Thanks to this technology Nestle USA’s Pizza Division has reduced its water usage and sewer discharge by 7.4 million gallons per year at its factory in Little Chute, Wisconsin.

As explained in an Environmental Leader article:

"GE provided its GenGard water-treatment chemistry with stress tolerant polymer (STP) and TrueSense controls for the plant’s four main ammonia condensers. These products allowed Nestlé to precisely control the cooling water and enable more cycles where the water-treatment chemicals are in high concentrations. As a result, the Little Chute factory is able to reuse its cooling water to a much greater degree."

GE acknowledged the Pizza company for its efforts by giving it the "Return on Environment" award. In addition to saving water, the pizza factory has also managed to save $50,000 through its water reduction efforts.

© 2012, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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World Water Week 2011: The Business of Water Management Requires Collaboration

World Water Week is the annual meeting place for the planet’s most urgent water-related issues. Organized by Stockholm International Water Institute, it brings together the world’s experts, practitioners, decision makers and leaders to exchange ideas, foster new thinking and develop solutions.

World Water Week opened in Stockholm on Monday August 22nd with calls for better urban water management to ensure food and water security. Around 2,500 experts from some 130 countries are attending the 21st edition of World Water Week in Stockholm. They are working on preparations for the United Nation’s conference on sustainable development set to be held in Rio de Janeiro in June 2012. The group expects to publish a declaration at the end of this week (August 26).

Despite the U.N.’s adoption of a resolution recognizing access to clean water and sanitation as a human right, 1.6 billion people continue to live in areas affected by drought, and that the number could easily rise to two billion without immediate efforts to manage the situation.

As the migration from rural areas continues, 830 million poor currently live in urban areas. Such rapid growth is straining natural resources and infrastructure. These areas often lack water and sanitation services which is a leading cause of mortality for both children and their mothers. Investments from governments and companies now will pay dividends later.

“More than ever we need new technologies and policy solutions…to compensate for water shortages hitting a growing number of the world’s inhabitants,” Swedish Minister for International Development Cooperation, Gunilla Carlsson, said in her opening address at the World Water Conference. “Increased access to clean water supplies and sanitation is an important catalytic force for development,” Carlsson said, insisting “the costs of not acting far exceed the costs of well-functioning, sustainable water resource management.”

To help shed some light on the issues, 2degrees streamed live webinars of the World Water Week sessions. Here is a summary of those sessions:

On Monday, August 22nd, the Global Water Adaptation Action Alliance (GWAAA), World Bank and Conservation International (CI) discussed climate and hydrological regimes determining water availability, and how well institutions are managing water resources. This session addressed the challenges of balancing energy, food and ecological security in a changing climate. It provided an interactive forum for overcoming barriers to respond sustainably to emerging conditions.

On Tuesday, August 23rd, the Water Footprint Network (WFN) & Swedish Textile Water Initiative (STWI), Coca Cola Europe, The Nature Conservancy, and others addressed the Sustainability of Water Footprints: From Assessment to Strategic Response. They presented innovative research and case studies from both the public and private sectors to demonstrate this cutting edge of the water footprint assessment. As explained in the session, by unlocking the information embedded in the water footprint, all actors can take the most effective action toward reducing the impacts of water use.

Also on Tuesday, August 23rd, Ceres, Global Environmental Management Initiative (GEMI), The Nature Conservancy (TNC), WBCSD and the World Resources Institute (WRI) addressed Corporate Water Risk Management: Seeking Solutions. The session explained that water risk and its management are important to business and stakeholders. Companies are partnering with others to better understand risks, reduce impacts, seize opportunities and, ultimately, drive change towards more sustainable practices and policies. Solutions involve use of innovative tools, a selection of which were showcased, along with user experiences and exploring how they fit together.

On Wednesday, August 24th, FAO Rome, UNESCO, Stockholm Environmental Institute, King’s College London, International Youth Council, Women for Water Partnership, SIWI, Value Chain Development, University of Nebraska, WWF, World Bank, GWP, and more discussed World Water Day 2012 – Water and Food Security: Call for Solutions. This much anticipated debate focused on the viability of water and food security solutions. The core topics debated were: innovation or traditional methods; intensification or greener agriculture; food import or self sufficiency; increasing food production; or reducing food waste and adopting sustainable diets.

Also on Wednesday, August 24th, Building Partnerships for Development in Water and Sanitation (BPD), Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI) and Adviser on Urban Environment and Development (WASTE) discussed Understanding the Opportunities for Entrepreneurs in Getting Sustainable Services to the Poor. Interest in market-based approaches to solving development challenges continues to grow. This session explored the different markets and incentives for sanitation service supply chains and discussed new business models to engage the private sector.

On Thursday, August 25th UNEP, UNESCO, WHO, FAO, French National Committee of International Commission on Irrigation and Drainage (ICID) & French Chapter of the International Water Association (ASTEE) addressed the question, Which Water Quality for Which Uses? A Regulators’ and Practitioners’ Perspective. How can water quality standards and guidelines protect water resources for multiple ecosystem services, and water uses? Key policy-makers, regulators, and researchers from around the world discussed the development of international water use guidelines, drawing on the results of the recent UNEP-UNESCO study.
Given the amount of water used by industry, the business community has a crucial role to play in sustainably managing water. According to some estimates, it takes 16 gallons of water to produce a single microchip, one pair of jeans takes 2,900 gallons, a single hamburger takes 634 gallons, and one cup of tea takes 9 gallons.

Although businesses seem to be increasingly focused on energy, many are less focused on water. However, there is an intrinsic link between water and energy. The business community needs to tackle the energy and carbon implications of supplying clean water and disposing of wastewater.

The Energy Saving Trust has produced a report on quantifying the energy and carbon effects of water saving. The focus is on domestic use, (i.e. households), but we need to see more focus on business and industry.

Although it is an uphill struggle getting sustainability professionals to accept that all of our natural resources need to be used sustainably and managed in combination with one other, some businesses are making major efforts.

A recent Greenbiz article interviewed sustainability professionals that are taking significant steps to reduce their companies’ water footprints. For example, Intel recycled 2 billion gallon of water in 2010, and MillerCoors brewery is planning to save as much as 16 million gallons of water.

Since 1998, Intel has invested more than $100 million in water conservation programs at their global facilities. To date, the company’s comprehensive and aggressive efforts have saved nearly 40 billion gallons of water — enough for roughly 370,000 U.S. homes for an entire year. Intel also harvests as much water from its manufacturing processes as possible and directs it to equipment such as cooling towers and scrubbers.

Since February 2007, the Dow Chemical Company facility in Terneuzen, Netherlands, has been reusing municipal household wastewater to help preserve community water supplies and reduce demand for desalinated water in a water-stressed region. Every day, Dow takes 2.6 million gallons of municipal wastewater and applies reverse osmosis technology to reuse the water twice. More than 70 percent of the wastewater is reused in manufacturing plants, and then used again in cooling towers before it is released into the atmosphere as steam. This purification process requires half the chemical treatment and 65 percent less energy than desalinating the same amount of sea water, and the energy savings are equivalent to lowering carbon dioxide emissions by 5,000 tons per year.

Levi Strauss & Co. is working to build sustainability into everything they do, including reducing the water used throughout the life-cycle of their products. Based on their research, they know that they can reduce the most water by focusing on more sustainable cotton farming and by educating consumers about how they care for their products. They are also reducing water use in the part of the supply chain where they have more direct influence. The company has challenged itself to reduce the amount of water for a pair of jeans from an average of 42 liters of water to as little as 1.5 liters.

For MillerCoors, water efficiency is critical to their business, and they are focused on working towards their 2015 goal of reducing overall water usage by 15 percent. They are testing new innovations in their breweries to reduce or replace water-based processes completely.

Anheuser-Busch is making progress towards their ambitious water reduction goal. Their success so far is based not on one big innovation or major investment, but on a system-wide approach that relies on integrating sustainability into the DNA of their management philosophy, not just on technology upgrades. The company has introduced measurable, aggressive water conservation targets which they have linked to individual rewards. They have reduced their global water usage by 6 percent in 2010 and by more than 19 percent since 2007, saving the equivalent of nearly 16,000 Olympic-sized swimming pools over three years.

MGM Resorts International is acutely aware of its responsibility to minimize its use of water. They take a comprehensive approach to this challenge, and look for innovative ways to reduce their consumption.

The Coca-Cola Company aims to maintain a water sustainable business on a global scale, so they developed and implemented a water stewardship strategy, with a global goal to safely return to nature and to communities an amount of water equivalent to what they use in their beverages and their production by 2020. Since 2005, with the help of respected partners like WWF and USAID, Coca-Cola has engaged in more than 320 water projects in 86 countries. Projects have focused on watershed protection and conservation, expanding community drinking water, sanitation access, and improving water for productive use.

SABMiller India is working to protect the water supply for the brewery and local farmers. The region has traditionally suffered from over-extraction and poor water management, which has resulted in a significant drop in the aquifer level, posing serious risks to both SABMiller India and the livelihoods of local communities. In response, SABMiller India worked with local partners to construct four water recharge dams to prevent excessive water run-off and facilitate the natural water replenishment of the groundwater. Since their construction, it is estimated that there has been a net rise of the groundwater by 31 feet, representing almost as much water as was extracted last year by the brewery. Additionally, SABMiller helped local farmers reduce their water use by establishing demonstration fields in 10 local villages to showcase water-efficient irrigation techniques and crops. Farmers that took on the improved plant varieties have decreased their water usage and improved their incomes by as much as 147 percent.

Due to the complexity of the issues surrounding water scarcity, cross-sector collaboration is crucial to establishing successful strategies for water management in business and industry. New partnerships are required that evaluate water risks in the value chain and share best practice to manage these risks.

Collaborative approaches to water management deliver positive results for entrepreneurs, water companies, global corporations and domestic water users, which in turn secures positive outcomes for both local communities and businesses.

Source: Global Warming is Real

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Blue Planet Academy Green Certificate Programs

The Blue Planet Academy offers green certificate programs. Here are summaries of five programs:

Agronomist

As an agronomist you contribute largely to an environmentally, economically and socially sustainable and secure provision of agricultural products. Our society desires healthy, ethically and responsibly produced food, competitive and affordable for all, but also attractive and recreational spaces in an intact and diverse natural and cultural landscape.
Certificate of Science in Agriculture
6 semesters


Electrical Engineer RES (Renewable Energy Sources)

Electricians install, maintain and repair all electrical installations in and outside of buildings. Your work includes installation, commissioning and operation of electrical equipment and electronic systems. Energy production and supply of renewable energy sources are utterly important for the future and therefore one of the most important tasks during this course. Thanks to the intense and specific training in renewable and alternative energy sources you will profit of excellent career opportunities.
Certificate of Science in Electrical Engineering
6 semesters


Environment Expert

We bring together science, technology, design and the social sciences. This unique apprenticeship will equip you with the knowledge needed to address the urgent problems our world faces – from environmental issues like climate change and the scarcity of critical resources like food and water, to urban growth, globalisation and sustainability.
Certificate of Science in Environments
6 semesters


Recyclist

Recyclists are professionals who collect, sort and separate salvage of any sort into their components. Furthermore you provide all that's needed for recycling. You deliver non-recyclable materials to environmentally acceptable disposal zones.Your work ensures the reutilization of used materials. Thanks to recycling the limited resources of our planet can be conserved.
Certificate of Science in Recycling
6 semesters


Water Technologist

The key challenge for mankind's future is the reliable supply of safe drinking water, our No. 1 nutrient. Water knowledge and professionally educated process specialists are in high demand. As a water technologist, you can follow various career opportunities in water management, such as planning, constructing and operating water treatment systems, the optimization of drinking water, wastewater and process water treatment, the selective removal of pollutants from water and the exploitation of water resources
Certificate of Science in Water Management
6 semesters


For more information, contact Blue Planet Academy here

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International Conference on Sustainable Water Resources Management

The sixth International Conference on Water Resources Management will present recent technological and scientific developments associated with the management of surface and sub-surface water resources. The conference will be held on May 23-25, 2011 in Riverside, California, USA.

The conference will bring together engineers, scientists and other professionals from many different countries, involved in research and development activities in a wide range of water resources and management topics.

The Wessex Institute of Technology has successfully held many water related conferences around the world and Water Resources Management is one of the most important conferences in the series.

for more information go to: Water Resources Management 2011

© 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

CIWEM'S Water & Environment Conference 2011

CIWEM holds an annual conference addressing the multidisciplinary issues of the global water and environment sector. This year it is focused on the issue of the “Big Society” and the implications for the environment sector. The conference will be held at Olympia Conference Centre in London, England on the 6th-7th of April 2011

The current trend toward austerity is a major global challenge. Funding for projects will be more restricted, demanding novel and innovative solutions. We are facing a new financial reality which will focus our efforts towards achieving our aims for sustainability and environmental gains with decreasing funding.

The UK coalition government has launched a "Big Society" programme intended to "take power away from politicians and give it to the people," (see programme). The programme includes giving communities more power, transferring power from central to local government using 'third sector' resources to deliver government programmes and giving wider public access to government data. This programme will create opportunities and challenges for the environment sector and society as a whole.

In April 2011, CIWEM will hold a two-day Annual Conference that will address multidisciplinary issues across all areas of the global water and environment sector and will also focus on the issue of the "Big Society" and the implications for the environment sector.

The aim of the conference is to challenge and inspire the water and environmental community by sharing knowledge and best practice, which is at the heart of meeting key global challenges. There will be a mix of keynote speakers, offered papers, exhibitions and networking opportunities that will make this the key event for water and environment professionals.

Outputs from the conference freely available on the CIWEM website after the event.

Confirmed keynote speakers include:

  • Richard Benyon MP, Minister for Natural Environment and Fisheries
  • Tony Juniper, campaigner, writer, sustainability adviser, environmentalist and former Executive Director of Friends of the Earth
  • Dr Mike Clarke, Chief Executive of RSPB
  • John Edmonds, Aldersgate Group Lead on Environmental Skills, Non-Executive Director of Carbon Trust, Former General Secretary of the GMB Trade Union and Chair of the Inland Waterways Advisory Council (IWAC)
  • Phil Rothwell, Head of Strategy and Engagement, Environment Agency

    For more information on conference speakers see the Speaker Programme.

    To see details on Water & Environment 2010, see the Conference Outputs page for the presentations and delegate notes.

    For more information go to Water and Environment 2011. For information on sponsorship contact Lauren Goozee.

    © 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.
  • Webinar on Sustainable Strategies for Corporate Water Management

    Earthscan is offering a free webinar on how to assess water usage and develop more successful sustainable business strategies for consumption. The Webinar will be broadcast on Thursday 24th March 2011 17:00 (UK time – GMT +1), 12:00 (EDT), 9:00 (PDT). A 30 minute presentation followed by Q & A session.

    The webinar will address the issues of global water management including:

    • Learn how water footprints can be calculated for individual processes and products, as well as for consumers, nations and businesses
    • Guidance on how industries can both assess their usage, and implement more sustainable strategies for utilizing this critical resource.
    • How to develop a corporate water strategy and manage it as a key business issue in order to capture the real value of water
    • How to assess water usage and develop more successful sustainable business strategies for consumption.

    The webinar will be presented by Arjen Hoekstra and William Sarni the authors of The Water Footprint Assessment Manual, and Corporate Water Strategies.

    Arjen Hoekstra is a is Professor in Multidisciplinary Water Management at the University of Twente, the Netherlands, and Scientific Director of the global Water Footprint Network. He specialises in integrated water resources planning and management, river basin management, policy analysis, and systems analysis.

    Hoekstra will introduce the ‘Water Footprint’ concept and provide insight into how water footprints can be calculated for individual processes and products, as well as for consumers, nations and businesses.

    William Sarni is the Director and Practice Leader, Enterprise Water Strategy Sustainability and Climate Change, Deloitte Consulting LLP. Will has been providing sustainability, environmental and hydrogeological consulting services to private- and public-sector enterprises for more than three decades, with a focus on developing and implementing corporate-wide sustainability strategies, as well as broad based climate and water programs. He is also the author of Corporate Water Strategies (Earthscan: 2011).

    Sarni will explain how vital it is that businesses understand the concepts important in water footprinting, such as embedded and virtual water. He will also draw on case studies that show how water strategies can be developed, to make businesses more resilient, successful and environmentally sustainable.

    The webinar is ideal for business leaders, sustainability consultants, accountants and advisers, water resource planners, and policy-makers. Students of business studies and water resource management. Anyone interested in understanding how we can better manage this critical resource.

    Register now for this free webinar

    If you can not make the event, simply register for the event as normal and you will be sent a link to the archive version on 25th March.

    © 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

    Banana Peels and Water Purification

    Banana peels can be used to purify drinking water contaminated with toxic heavy metals such as copper and lead. According to a February 2011 study published in Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research, researchers from the Bioscience Institute at Botucatu, Brazil, indicates that banana skins are better than conventional purification agents. Traditionally water purifiers like aluminium oxide, cellulose and silica are used but these are expensive and have potentially toxic side effects.

    The team's method follows previous work that showed that plant parts, such as cane husks, coconut fibres and peanut shells, can also remove toxins from water. All of these natural materials contain chemicals that attract and collect heavy metals.

    In a laboratory experiment, Gustavo Rocha de Castro, a researcher at the institute and co-author of this study, along with his colleagues, dried banana peels in the sun for a week, ground them and added them to river water containing known concentrations of copper and lead. They found that the peels absorbed 97 per cent of the metals after just one hour.

    The metals can then be removed from the skins so that they can be safely disposed of. According to Castro the material could also work on cadmium, nickel and zinc.

    © 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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    Water School’s Ascent of Mount Kilimanjaro

    On March 23rd 2011 an International team is climbing Mount Kilimanjaro to raise awareness about the world water crisis as well as to raise funds and bring attention to a Canadian nonprofit known as the Water School. Mount Kilimanjaro is the tallest mountain on the continent of Africa, and fourth highest of the noted “seven summits.”

    Each climber is responsible for raising one dollar for every meter of the climb. That amounts to $5,895 for each climber which will go directly to the field work that Water School is doing in places like Sudan, Nairobi, Uganda, Kenya and Haiti to bring villages clean drinking water. The Water School hopes to raise $75,000 from the Water Climb, ultimately saving the lives of 7,500 people.

    Every day thousands of people have to walk miles just to get a drink of clean water. According to the World Health Organization more than one in six people worldwide – 894 million – do not have access to safe, clean water. Every year approximately 3.5 million people die from inadequate access to clean drinking water and poor hygiene. One and one half million of these deaths are children. This is even more appalling when the cost of providing clean water to a child for life through the Water School program is only $10.

    Water School is a 501 (3) (c) non-profit organization with a mission to provide simple, safe, strategic, and sustainable clean water solutions to the developing world. Water School was founded in 2007 by Bob Dell, a water scientist, and Fraser Edwards, a businessman with decades of experience in partnering with indigenous leaders to implement lasting change.

    It is the Water School uses the method of SODIS (solar disinfection), which employs a plastic BPA-free water bottle that is placed in the sun for a day. The natural UV rays of the sun purifies water by eliminating all harmful bacteria. These bacteria are known to cause diseases like cholera, typhoid, dysentery and life threatening symptoms like chronic diarrhea. Water School provides the bottles and educates local people on proper health and hygiene practices. In addition, by working with local businesses to provide the bottles necessary for the SODIS process, Water School is one of the few organizations to deliver a truly sustainable solution to the world’s impoverished and developing nations.

    A Haitian doctor recently commented “If we had been teaching this program for the past five years, I believe we would not have a cholera epidemic.” It takes just three to nine days for a person to die from dehydration. A mere $10 can give a child clean water for life through Water School. This is a truly innovative solution to an issue that undermines every developing nation in the world. Help Water School achieve its goal of clean water for those without.

    To sponsor this worthy cause click here. For more information on the Kilimanjaro Climb and on the Water School programs, go to http://www.waterclimb.com/ or visit Water School’s website at http://www.waterschool.com/. Contact Jeff Cannon at 212 993 6464 or via email at jc@thinkcannon.com.

    © 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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    Celebrate World Water Day

    The United Nation's World Water Day is celebrated annually on March 22nd as a means of focusing attention on the importance of freshwater. This is a day of advocacy for the sustainable management of freshwater resources around the globe.

    The theme for World Water Day 2011 is Water for cities: responding to the urban challenge. This year's campaign aims to spotlight and encourage governments, organizations, communities, and individuals to actively engage in addressing the issues associated with urban water management. The objective is to focus international attention on the impact of urban population growth, industrialization and the uncertainties caused by climate change. World Water Day also focuses attention on the impacts of conflicts and natural disasters on urban water systems. 


    Key issues discussed on this day include:

    • The growing urban water and sanitation demand
    • Increased pollution from municipal and industrial discharges
    • Climate change and its unforeseen risks and challenges
    • Overexploitation of available water resources
    • Better targeting of assistance for the urban poor
    • The critical role of local governments and other service providers in tackling these challenges

    To help draw attention to this day, the UN's World Water Day website is reinforced by social media channels like Facebook and Twitter. Through these vehicles, the website is disseminating messages and engaging people (schools, civil society, and NGOs) in activities and events.

    Here is a list of U.N. resources to help celebrate World Water Day:

    World Water Day official website
    Events Map for World Water Day
    Campaign Materials Downloads
    Facebook page
    TWITTER account
    YouTube
    Flickr photostream.
    World Water Day Advocacy Guide (2.4Mb PDF)
    Water and Disasters 21.03.2011 (PDF)
    Workshop on International Water Quality Standards/Guidelines for Ecosystems (PDF)
    Workshop on UN‐Water Mapping Exercise on Water Quality 21.03.2011 (PDF)

    © 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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    Siemens Water Tool on Facebook

    The global water industry is expected to reach US $1 trillion by 2020, and corporations like Siemens are getting on board to help address the growing water crisis and provide valuable marketing exposure.

    Siemens is challenging Facebook users to commit to save 50 million gallons of water annually, through their Personal Water Footprint Calculator on Facebook. Built by leading social media company Friend2Friend, through agency SocialTyze, this simple quiz tells you how much water you consume annually, and asks you to commit to saving water.

    Initially released for World Water Day on March 22nd 2010, Siemens had to increase their goal to saving 3 million gallons of water, as their initial goal of 1 million gallons was quickly exceeded. The new goal of the Siemen's Facebook app is to conserve 50 million gallons of water. The Facebook application also includes detailed water footprint information and water-saving tips.

    “It’s great to see Siemens positioned in social media as a brand supporting important causes, such as water conservation. We also hope to communicate through the application and fanpage that Siemens is part of the answer to some of the toughest questions society is facing these days.” said Stefan Heeke, Director Interactive Communications at Siemens Corporation.

    As a manufacturer of water treatment technology for communities and industry, Siemens Water Technologies understands the value of water to daily life. By sponsoring this application, they are promoting the importance of water that’s so clear to them in their daily work, but sometimes not so clear to consumers.

    “We hope to increase consumer awareness of the work Siemens has done to create more efficient water systems and develop new ways to conserve and recycle water,” commented Bill Scully, Dir. eMarketing of Siemens Water Technologies.

    © 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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    Water Management Webcast: Cities and the Global Water Crisis

    A live water webcast will air on World Water Day (March 22, 2011), at 1 PM ET / 10 AM PT, it is titled, "Cities and the Global Water Crisis: Managing a Vital Resource." The webcast is presented by Sustainable Cities Collective, deals with the ways global cities are dealing with the challenge of managing their most essential resource. Expert panelists will tackle water supply issues, environmental concerns, weather events, and the growing influence of climate change.

  • What drier climates and unpredictable weather could mean for water management
  • The greatest strains on water supply, and the potential effects on population
  • Solutions like graywater use, cistern systems, and desalination
  • Agricultural and manufacturing processes that minimize water consumption

    Participants in the water webcast include Dr. Paul Bowen, Larry Levine, Scott Edward Anderson and Richard McGill Murphy

    Dr. Paul Bowen is the Director of Strategic Business Initiatives, Water Technology and a Member of the Global Water Stewardship team for The Coca-Cola Company. In that role, he oversees water use efficiency programs for global manufacturing, including work with plants on water minimization, water reuse, and water conservation. Paul is a member of the 2010-2011 Board of Trustees for the Water Environment Federation (WEF), and previously was an Assistant Professor for the School of Civil Engineering & Environmental Science at the University of Oklahoma and Senior Staff Consultant for Metcalf & Eddy.

    Larry Levine is a senior attorney in NRDC's Water Program, and works on a variety of issues pertaining to water quality in the Northeastern US, as well as at the national policy level. He focuses especially on promoting the use of “green infrastructure” as a sustainable solution to polluted urban runoff and raw sewage overflows. Larry was previously a litigation fellow at NRDC and a clinical fellow in environmental law at the Georgetown University Law Center, and is a graduate of Yale Law School and Tulane University.

    Scott Edward Anderson is the founder of VerdeStrategy, a consulting and advisory firm focused on the cleantech, energy, and environment sectors, and the popular blog TheGreenSkeptic.com, as well as a frequent commentator on FOX Business Network. He has held management positions for large institutions, such as The Nature Conservancy, the world's most successful global conservation organization, and Ashoka, a social venture capital organization with operations in 72 countries worldwide, and has consulted with dozens of businesses and social entrepreneurs around the globe.

    Richard McGill Murphy moderates the Sustainable Business Forum. Richard is a journalist and media consultant with 15 years of experience covering business, technology and international affairs. He writes for Fortune and BusinessWeek and serves as managing partner of Walled City Media LLC, a media strategy firm. Previously, he has worked as a top editor at Fortune Small Business and CNNMoney.com, and earlier served as editorial and program director at the Committee to Protect Journalists. He holds a bachelor’s degree in literature from Harvard and a doctorate in social anthropology from Oxford University.

    To view the webcast register here.

    © 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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  • Population Growth and Climate Change will Add to the World Water Crisis

    Water shortages will be one of the world's most pressing problems in the next decade, and this will be compounded by a growing global population and climate change.

    Without some means of equitable water distribution, water may even be the cause of the next world war. Rivers lakes and aquifers are cross border issues. Already the allocation of water resources is causing disputes between Israel and Palestine, India and Pakistan, as well as the US and Mexico. Many believe that the crisis in Darfur was at least in part due to issues surrounding access to water.

    Population growth will place additional demands on dwindling water supplies. The world's population is expected to grow to almost 9 billion by 2050. In addition to the population explosion, growing wealth and urbanization is fueling demand for water. The United Nations climate panel says between 90 and 220 million people in Africa will face water shortages by 2020 due to climate change. This will have a direct impact on farms, which exacerbate the problem by further depleting groundwater.

    According to Britain's chief scientist John Beddington, "The availability of fresh water...[is] the first problem that has got to be addressed. Agriculture is intimately linked with that, but I would say water is probably going to be more concerning over the next 10 years."

    "Population growth, an increase in wealth, urbanization, and ... climate change, all of those are going to present really big problems to humanity," Beddington told the Reuters Global Climate and Alternative Energy Summit.

    Climate change will add additional burdens to the worsening water crisis. Climate change is forecast to disrupt rainfall patterns, leading to more severe droughts and floods, posing problems for the supply of fresh water.

    "Water security fears, rising demand for food and a drive to curb greenhouse gas emissions all posed commercial opportunities," Beddington said.

    To help combat growing water problems, countries need to focus on water efficiency. Countries can also reduce the burden of climate change by focusing on low-carbon technologies, including energy efficiency, renewable energy and carbon capture.

    © 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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    Contaminated Water Kills

    Water is vital for life and its growing scarcity is a threat to all life, particularly the world's poor. Since World War II, contaminated water has killed more people around the globe than all wars and other forms of violence combined.

    Contaminated water is the result of increased pollution, increased water demand, and the corporate control of water access.

    On July 28th, the United Nations General Assembly adopted a resolution that recognizes access to clean water and sanitation as a human right. The resolution called on States and international organizations to provide financial resources, build capacity and transfer technology, particularly to developing countries, in scaling up efforts to provide safe, clean, accessible and affordable drinking water and sanitation for all.

    Despite their reticence, privileged of nations must accept their responsibility to help others gain equal access to clean water and sanitation.

    © 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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    Solutions to Diminishing Ground Water

    Water is a defining feature of the earth and absolutely essential for sustaining life. In total, 70 percent of the earth's surface is covered with water. However, 97.5 percent of that is salt water, which makes it undrinkable for humans and unusable for irrigation. Fresh water accounts for the other 2.5 percent, but about two thirds of that is locked up in glaciers and thick ice sheets on the north and south poles.

    Only 1 percent of that 1 percent is easily accessible. That leaves about .01 percent of all the water on earth available to sustain life.

    The world's aquifers provide the majority of potable water and they are being used faster than they can be replenished. With 70 to 80 percent of global groundwater being used for agricultural irrigation, it accounts for most of the increase in demand.

    Over a third of the world's population suffers from water scarcity and this directly contributes to the loss of agricultural lands. Some of the most serious potential zones of groundwater depletion include Africa, northeastern China, northwestern India, Iran, northeastern Pakistan, southeastern Spain, California's Central Valley and central United States.

    The Ogallala Aquifer of the central United States is being rapidly depleted. This is a huge aquifer which underlies portions of eight states, but it is being recharged, in the more arid parts of the aquifer, at a rate of only about 10 percent of annual withdrawals.

    Groundwater depletion is a serious issue and it is growing more serious every year. The problem of diminishing water supply is being compounded by the fact that aquifers can be easily contaminated by a variety of sources including ground storage tanks, septic systems, hazardous waste sites, landfills, road salts, fertilizers, pesticides, and various chemicals.

    We need to see better water conservation and protection if we are to address the problem of diminishing ground water. Some viable techniques include using more sophisticated irrigation techniques, developing crops that can survive with less water, and redirecting water on the landscape so that a higher proportion soaks back in to replenish the groundwater. Another technique involves aquifer storage and recovery which involves re-injecting water back into an aquifer for later recovery and use.

    A study commissioned by the Britain’s Department for International Development and released by Britain-based NGO Forum for the Future, shows that regional cooperation in sharing scarce water resources must be promoted over hoarding.

    © 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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