Monday, January 29, 2018

Friday, January 26, 2018

The Earth is Sad

If you're on Twitter, be sure to follow Eco-friendly Tips at: @joyfullyECO

Here are some photos from recent Eco-friendly posts:





Thursday, January 25, 2018

Human Rights to Water and Sanitation




A child from the Za’atari Refugee Camp in Jordan raised a flag to represent 
Goal 6,  Safe Water and Sanitation. Photo: UNICEF Jordan/badran

Plastic Bags & Sea Turtles

A great post from @Twitter:

Via



Sunday, January 21, 2018

Water Independence with Zero Mass Water

SOURCE: a Hydropanel that makes drinking water from sunlight and air

 




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No pipe input. No electrical input. No infrastructure. Independence means peace of mind. SOURCE is abundance in drinking water: up to a case of bottled water generated per day from a pair of panels.

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Read more here and sign up for updates and special offers: https://www.zeromasswater.com/

Saturday, January 20, 2018

Cape Town Water Crisis

Cape Town water crisis: WWF helps you understand the basics


By Christina Pitt


Cape Town – With only 39% of Capetonians having adhered to water restrictions in the month of January, making the water crisis even more urgent, the WWF has released an information pack detailing what residents can expect should the city's taps run dry.

The document builds on many of the main points raised at a recent press briefing on the water crisis held by Cape Town Mayor Patricia De Lille.

When is Day Zero likely to happen?

Both the City of Cape Town and WWF have calculated Day Zero to be about three months away on April 21.

This date is calculated based on how much water is in the big six dams that feed Cape Town and the Western Cape Water Supply System, and how much water is being used by the city's residents, agriculture and how much dam water is lost to evaporation.

"As of 15 January, the dams were 28% full and if we continue using water at the current rate we will run out of water on 21 April," says WWF.

De Lille explained at the press briefing on Thursday that Day Zero could only be avoided if every single resident saves water. As things stand, Capetonians have mostly ignored the water restrictions.

"During the past week only 39% of Cape Town's residents used less than 87 litres of water per person per day – compared to 54% during the first week of January. I want to thank those residents who are saving," said De Lille.

Cape Town's average daily collective consumption remained too high, De Lille said. From an average of 578 million litres per day, Cape Town was now using 618 million litres per day, she said.

"For each day that Cape Town uses more than 500 million litres, the city moves closer to Day Zero," De Lille said.

What is likely to happen on Day Zero? 

"On Day Zero, the city will move into full-scale Emergency Stage 3. This means that water to households and businesses will be cut off. There will not be enough water in the system to maintain normal services and the taps (and toilets) will run dry," stated WWF.

Schools and businesses may not be able to operate if there is no water supply.

According to WWF, only hospitals and clinics, stand-pipes in informal settlements and the 200 points of distribution where people can collect their allocated 25 litres per person will still receive water.

De Lille said that water supply to the Cape Town CBD and informal settlements would not be cut off on Day Zero.

At the briefing, De Lille said the city would be moving to Level 6B water restrictions from February 1, with a new target of 50 litres of water per person per day.

"The new daily collective consumption target is now 450 million litres per day," De Lille said.

"This will be in place for 150 days, after which the City will reassess."

Read full article here: https://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/cape-town-water-crisis-wwf-helps-you-understand-the-basics-20180119