Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Ooho! The Edible Water Bottle

This innovative concept of replacing plastic water bottles is getting lots of raves, but detractors are also out there. What do you think about Ooho? In reaching out to my small circle of water activists, I found people who love the Ooho and but some think it still encourages the concept of "gotta have portable water with me no matter what, and as long as it's not from a water fountain."

(http://mentalfloss.com/article/68911/edible-water-bottle-could-change-hydration-forever)


Here's an intro from Interesting Engineering:

         'Think outside of the bottle! Those are the words of wisdom from a London-based innovative start-up called Skipping Rocks Lab, a group of researchers and business developers whose aim is to make product packaging obsolete. Their solution to the unsustainable production and disposal of plastic bottles is to make an edible water bottle you can safely eat and drink. It’s called Ooho!"

Read more here: http://interestingengineering.com/meet-ooho-a-sustainable-water-bottle-you-can-eat-and-drink/

Tuesday, April 11, 2017

Top 10 Most Endangered Rivers in the US

Is a river near you on the list? 



Colorado River snaking along the Grand Canyon at sunset. Arizona.


Water is life, yet climate change and certain public policies may be endangering its future in America, a nonprofit group warns in a new report. The stakes are high, with the current presidential administration having proposed budget cuts that may eliminate some safeguards for clean drinking water and rivers nationwide.

That’s according to American Rivers, a Washington, D.C.-based conservation group, which released its annual list of America’s Most Endangered Rivers on Tuesday. The list outlines rivers that the group warns face an urgent threat or critical decision point in the coming year.
America’s Most Endangered Rivers of 2017:
#1: Lower Colorado River (Arizona, California, Nevada)
Threat: Water demand and climate change

#2: Bear River (California)
Threat: New Dam

#3: South Fork Skykomish (Washington)
Threat: New hydropower project

#4: Mobile Bay Rivers (Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi)
Threat: Poor water management

#5: Rappahannock River (Virginia)
Threat: Fracking

#6: Green-Toutle River (Washington)
Threat: New mine

#7: Neuse and Cape Fear Rivers (North Carolina)
Threat: Pollution from hog and chicken farms

#8: Middle Fork Flathead River (Montana)
Threat: Oil transport by rail

#9: Buffalo National River (Arkansas)
Threat: Pollution from massive hog farm

#10: Menominee River (Michigan, Wisconsin)
Threat: Open pit sulfide mining
 
Read full article here: http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2017/04/most-endangered-rivers-us-american-rivers/?google_editors_picks=true

Thursday, April 6, 2017

Another Water Crisis

National Geographic has a section on their website called: Water Crisis News. This is a great resource to check for issues around the world. Below is an intro to one of the current articles:


Wildlife Dying En Masse as South American River Runs Dry


            "The Pilcomayo River in Paraguay is littered with dead caiman and fish carcasses as the government scrambles to find a solution.

           Vultures rest in the tree’s upper branches, their black bodies in stark contrast to the blanched wood beneath their feet. Below them, caimans and capybaras crawl in sucking mud through the Agropil lagoon, seeking water that is unlikely to arrive for many months. The river has dried up, and there is nowhere for them to go.

           Paraguay is in the midst of an ecological crisis."

Read full article here: http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2016/07/pilcomayo-river-paraguay-caiman-capybara-fish-drought-death-water/