Sunday, April 26, 2015

Seven Water Organizations You Should Know

Water organizations and companies throughout the world are doing what they can to bring awareness about clean water, water scarcity, water rights, bringing clean water to underdeveloped nations, and developing water efficiency initiatives.

GOODNET - Gateway to Doing Good, brings us this list:

7 Water Organizations You Should Know

Clean water as a right, not a privilege


1.CHARITY:WATER

WHAT Nonprofit  that brings clean and safe drinking water to people in developing
countries.

2.MIYA

WHAT Good doing company that provides comprehensive urban water efficiency
solutions.
WHAT Nonprofit co-founded by Matt Damon and Gary White that provides access to
safe water and sanitation in developing countries.

WHAT A part of the Earth Institute, Columbia Water Center researches and designs
sustainable models of water management.

5.THREE AVOCADOS

WHAT A social enterprise that generates funds for clean water in Africa through the
sale of coffee.

6.WATERISLIFE

WHAT A nonprofit that brings clean water to those in need through short and long
term solutions.

7.PUREMADI

WHAT A nonprofit comprised of faculty and students of University of Virginia who are
creating water filtering technologies that improve human health and quality of life.
To read more about these organizations and companies, go to the original article at GOODNET: http://www.goodnet.org/articles/1000
Please Like the Occupy Your Water Rights page on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Occupy-Your-Water-Rights/317137214999301?ref=hl

Friday, March 27, 2015

The World's Best Water Photographer

These amazing photos of water in motion are amazing.

Please visit this site...and remember to cherish our water.

"These images are actually the ocean's waves, captured at their peak point of crash."



Thanks to Prof. Carol Yeager on Facebook for the tip on this fabulous photographer.

See more here: http://fb-694.lifebuzz.com/sea-mountains/

Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Fracking Company Sued Ohio Town For Its Water

Read this headline, and hold onto your hat!



Incredible, isn't it? Here's the scoop...excerpts from the article:


    A tiny town in eastern Ohio is being sued by an Oklahoma-based oil and gas company that bought more than 180 million gallons of water from the town last year. That water use, combined with a dry fall, prompted the village to temporarily shut off water to Gulfport Energy. Now, a second company has a water agreement, and there might not be enough water to go around.
    Gulfport Energy alleges in the lawsuit that the village of Barnesville, population 4,100, violated its agreement to provide water from its reservoir by entering into a contract with oil and gas company Antero Resources. Gulfport says the village’s contract with Antero allows for withdrawals beyond what Gulfport is allowed to take.
    Gulfport’s water supply can be shut off whenever water levels in the reservoir create a risk to the health and safety of the village residents and businesses. Last fall, the reservoir was down three feet below average when village officials stopped all outside withdrawals.
    “We felt like we had to shut everyone off to protect the regular users,” said village solicitor Marlin Harper. “We don’t have unlimited water.”
    But here’s the catch: Only Gulfport pumped water out of the reservoir last year. So even though, as Harper admits, the Antero contract has “a little bit of a priority” over the Gulfport contract, that’s not the reason Gulfport’s water supply was shut off. During the unusually dry fall, water withdrawals by Gulfport alone were too much for the reservoir to sustain.
    Environmentalists stress how valuable water is in the area, and particularly how valuable the reservoir at the heart of the lawsuit is. The water being sold to Gulfport comes from the Slope Creek Reservoir, which supplies water to all the town’s residents as well as another 8,000 people in neighboring areas, said John Morgan, a spokesman for Concerned Barnesville Area Residents.



The Slope Creek Reservoir in Barnesville, Ohio, provides water for at least two oil and gas companies.


Read the full story here: http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2015/03/24/3637048/fracking-all-the-water-away/

More Trouble For Our Oceans

While we're talking about global warming, and worrying about its effects on climate and severe weather, there is an increasing amount of research being done on our oceans that we should be following.

Here's an excerpt from the article by Chris Mooney: Global warming is now slowing down the circulation of the oceans — with potentially dire consequences


    ...now this week brings news of another potential mega-scale perturbation. According to a new study just out in Nature Climate Change by Stefan Rahmstorf of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research and a group of co-authors, we’re now seeing a slowdown of the great ocean circulation that, among other planetary roles, helps to partly drive the Gulf Stream off the U.S. east coast. The consequences could be dire – including significant extra sea level rise for coastal cities like New York and Boston.

    A vast, powerful, and warm current, the Gulf Stream transports more water than “all the world’s rivers combined,” according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. But it’s just one part of a larger regional ocean conveyor system – scientists technically call it the “Atlantic meridional overturning circulation” — which, in turn, is just one part of the larger global “thermohaline” circulation (“thermohaline” conjoins terms meaning “temperature” and “salty”).

    For the whole system, a key driver occurs in the North Atlantic ocean. Here, the warm Gulf Stream flows northward into cooler waters and splits into what is called the North Atlantic Current. This stream flows still further toward northern latitudes — until it reaches points where colder, salty water sinks due to its greater density, and then travels back southward at depth.


Graph of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation by Stefan Rahmstorf from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research. Red colors are surface currents, blue colors are below the surface. “NADW” stands for North Atlantic Deep Water.


Read the full article at The Washington Post website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/energy-environment/wp/2015/03/23/global-warming-is-now-slowing-down-the-circulation-of-the-oceans-with-potentially-dire-consequences/


Sunday, March 22, 2015

Depth of Plastic Pollution in Oceans Revealed

If this article on the state of our oceans doesn't get your attention, nothing will!

Excerpt from PHYS.org:

    PhD candidate Julia Reisser and her international team published the study in the journal Biogeosciences, reporting the first ever high-resolution vertical profiles of  in the so-called "ocean garbage patches".
    Most of the submerged plastics were very small - less than 1 mm across. Previous studies noticed that tiny plastics were missing from the oceans.
    "We have shown that at least a fraction of this missing plastic is still adrift at sea, but at depths greater than the  layer that is usually sampled by scientists," Ms Reisser said.
    By using a new measuring device called a Multi-level Trawl, the researchers were able to measure plastic concentrations in ten layers simultaneously, down to a depth of 5 meters.
    While taking measurements in the North Atlantic Garbage Patch, the team demonstrated that the mass concentration of millimetre-sized plastics drops exponentially from the  to deeper waters.


Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2015-02-depth-plastic-pollution-oceans-revealed.html#jCp

Saturday, March 14, 2015

What's California Going To Do Without Water?

The water situation in California is getting worse by the day. A recent article by SFist, based on an LA Times Op-Ed, declared:


California Has One Year Of Water Left



A section of Lake Oroville in August, 2014. Photo: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Excerpt from the SFist blog: 

stark Op-Ed in the LA Times lays out the case for why water rationing needs to start, statewide, basically now. Also, the state has to lay out better long-term water strategies, right now, because they have none and the situation is now dire.

The piece was written by a UC Irvine professor who's also a senior water scientist at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory/Caltech, Jay Famiglietti. And he notes that California's water problems date back to at least 2002, when satellite imaging began tracking the steady decline in statewide water reserves every year. 

Groundwater pumping, especially in the Central Valley, remains a huge problem, and we now have to face the reality of what a paltry winter this has been for rain following on the extraordinary drought conditions we faced last summer and fall.
In case you've already forgotten, San Francisco got exactly zero rainfall in the month of January, which is unprecedented as far back as records have been kept. And statewide, January was the driest one on record since 1895.
Per Famiglietti:
Right now the state has only about one year of water supply left in its reservoirs, and our strategic backup supply, groundwater, is rapidly disappearing. California has no contingency plan for a persistent drought like this one (let alone a 20-plus-year mega-drought), except, apparently, staying in emergency mode and praying for rain.
In short, we have no paddle to navigate this crisis.
###


Sounds pretty serious to me. Most of us are still taking access to clean water for granted. As for me, I'm watching every drop I use and try to remind others to do the same. I write a monthly newsletter for my condominium where I include reminders about saving water. Let's all do our part before it's too late.


Read More: http://sfist.com/2015/03/13/california_has_one_year_of_water_le.php

Thursday, January 1, 2015

Bringing Safe Water to the World

As you begin the New Year, be sure to be mindful of the water you use and the water you waste. An article from the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) tells us that one billion people around the world do not have access to clean water.

This recent article from NRDC highlights the staggering truth about access to clean water across the globe.



Excerpts from the article:

Developed countries have essentially eradicated diseases such as cholera, typhoid and malaria, but in developing nations, these and other waterborne illnesses kill 5 million people each year -- 6,000 children every day. And global warming is exacerbating this crisis as severe, prolonged droughts dry up water supplies in arid regions and heavy rains cause sewage overflows. In terms of the sheer number of people affected, the lack of access to safe water and basic sanitation is a massive problem. Yet it is a problem with proven solutions.

People who fall ill from waterborne diseases can't work. Women and girls who travel hours to fetch clean water for their families can't go to school or hold on to a job. Without proper sanitation, human waste pollutes waterways and wildlife habitat. Global warming and population pressures are drying up water supplies and instigating conflict over scarce resources. Expanding access to clean water and sanitation will have ripple effects throughout local economies and societies.
Children are particularly vulnerable to waterborne diseases. Their small bodies take in a disproportionately large quantity of water and its contaminants, and their immune systems are not equipped to fight off invaders such as E. coli, giardia and the typhoid bacteria. More than 2 million children are killed by such diarrheal diseases each year, and 90 percent of them are kids under five.


Safe water is a critical environmental and public health issue, as well as a means to lift people out of poverty and ensure human security. Yet the number of people without safe water is increasing. Water supply and sanitation programs can't be developed in isolation from other development issues. Global warming is affecting water supplies, creating shifts in agriculture and where people live. AIDS patients especially need access to clean water so they don't fall ill from common waterborne germs that healthy adults can fend off. Integrating safe water programs into larger development strategies often involves complex, many-sided reforms, which requires high-level coordination and firm political will to get the job done.


Read the full article here: http://www.nrdc.org/international/safewater.asp