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Politics : The Exxon Free Environmental Thread -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Wharf Rat who wrote (16993)11/18/2013 8:48:35 AM
From: Sam1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Eric

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 49117
 
This is a couple of months old, but still very relevant. People who live in the western part of the US know much more about water shortages than people in the east (although it doesn't prevent many of them from having water hungry lawns and frequent lush golf courses, lol).

Warning: Many watersheds in US failing 'stress test'
CNBC.com | Monday, 30 Sep 2013 | 7:00 AM ET

The U.S. has a growing water supply problem, according to a new study.

Nearly 1 in 10 of the nation's watersheds—areas of land that contain runoff from rivers and streams—are stressed to the point to where demand for water exceeds the natural supply.

"There is a lot of pressure on our water supply, especially In the western part of the country," said Kristen Averyt, associate director for science at the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, and lead author of the report released this month.

"As the population grows, so too does demand. We expect to have less surface water supplies in several areas of the U.S. by 2050," she added.

The report analyzes supplies and demand over the past 10 years for the 2,103 watersheds in the continental U.S. and found that 193 were stressed, meaning their supply of water for use was less than the demand.

The report said that the western U.S. is most vulnerable to water stress because the area relies on stored water as well as imports of water from rivers and streams—and the difference between demand and supply is so small that a slight shift in either can trigger shortages.

Because agriculture requires the most water—some 70 percent of all water use in the U.S.—it's a major contributing factor to water stress in the country, said the report. And the report states that in certain sections of the U.S., the use of cooling water by electrical power plants places yet another big demand on water supplies.

(Read more: Storms pushed NM out of 'extreme drought')

A survey by the research group EIRIS found that under current business conditions, water demand will outstrip supply by 2030—and will potentially put $63 trillion of global gross domestic product at risk by 2050.


"Along with agriculture, the use of water for electrical supply from power plants could force us into a tipping point on water demand," Averyt argued.

Warnings over a dwindling global water supply are not new. But this latest study is another wake-up call for the U.S., said Christiana Peppard, a professor of environmental ethics at Fordham University.


"What it does is emphasize that we ought to be thinking differently in sectors like agriculture and electricity generation when it comes to water use," Peppard said.

"We don't realize how much water goes into making things—what's called 'virtual water,'" said Peppard.


Whether it's for showering or cooking, Americans use on average 2,000 gallons of water a day, according to the Waterfootprint Network. That's double the global average.


But water used to make products—the so-called virtual water—can be be very extensive. One pair of blue jeans, for instance, takes more than 2,600 gallons of water to produce, according to Waterfootprint. It takes 6,300 gallons of water to make 2.5 pounds of chocolate. An eight-ounce cup of coffee uses up 36.5 gallons of water in production.

(Read more: Business looks to UN report for clarity on climate risks)

"We're seeing how economic areas are contributing to the water shortages," said Christopher Williams, professor of geography at Clark University.

"I think there will be a lot of tension between sectors for water in the future," Williams said.

"The Western U.S. is in a chronic state of water shortage from droughts," Williams added. "People could be competing with agriculture for water. I think there could be some areas of the country that won't produce any agricultural products that do now because of a lack of water."

Another threat to the water supply, said Fordham's Peppard, is the spreading use of hydraulic fracking, which combines chemicals and water for drilling.


"Fracking uses a lot of water in the process to get gas and oil out of the ground," she said. "And it's consumptive, meaning that the water can't be used again."

One possible solution to avert a water shortage is having two types of water and finding nonconsumptive water—water that can be used again, said Jose Lopez, professor of physics at Seton Hall University.

"We could have one supply of water for drinking and one to water the lawn," said Lopez. "The one for the lawn could be used water or what's also called 'gray water,' water that's been more or less recycled and not wasted."

"Cities out West are already doing something about their water issues," Lopez said. "They're putting a lot of work into this. It's something the rest of the country can learn from."

(Read more: Trial deals with water rights for Utah nuke plant)


"A lot of our infrastructure is younger than the rest of the country, but we have begun repairing reservoirs and other parts of our water system," said Scott Huntley, a spokesman for the Las Vegas Water Valley District, a public entity of Nevada.


"We had leaks, so we decided to get a jump on this by fixing them," Huntley said. "It's a conscious effort on our part not to fall behind."

In the end, what's important from this study or any other is to start taking action, say analysts.

"I think the clock is ticking on the things we need to be aware of and do when it comes to water," said Lopez.

"This is like the engine light going off in a car," said CIRE's Averyt. "It could mean the tire pressure is low or the engine is about to blow up. What it means is that we need to take a close look on what's happening to our water supply."

—By CNBC's Mark Koba. Follow him on Twitter @MarkKobaCNBC


© 2013 CNBC.com



URL: cnbc.com




To: Wharf Rat who wrote (16993)11/18/2013 12:15:55 PM
From: koan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 49117
 
Rahm, Obama and the inside game!:

Sure they were running an inside game which meant appeasing the right wing. As my SIL said, agreeing with me at our clan meeting, we had a window of opportunity to do the needed FDR trip and it is gone now. Poof! My goody two shoes daughter was even more vociferous in my defense. These are 100% liberal yellow dog dems.

I was arguing with my ex and her husband who was speaker of our house and she an aid and both lawyers and liberal, but traditional Dems and wanted to hear nothing negative about Obama and they were arguing against my contention. As others have done on SI over the years.

We had a window of opportunity to right this government and now we are back in a terrible position.

The plutocrats are much stronger than they were in 08!!!



To: Wharf Rat who wrote (16993)11/18/2013 12:41:09 PM
From: koan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 49117
 
And we really cannot blame Rahm! He did not do anything Obama did not sanction. Buck stops with Obama.

Obama also let Summers bully Roemer, Stigltiz and others, etc.

<<
Rahm needs to be hung by his balls until they rip off and he falls on his head.




To: Wharf Rat who wrote (16993)11/18/2013 12:43:18 PM
From: Eric  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 49117
 
Unfortunately its "Science vs. Politics".

Sad, sad, sad.



To: Wharf Rat who wrote (16993)11/18/2013 1:42:32 PM
From: Asymmetric  Respond to of 49117
 
The Devolution of the Seas
The Consequences of Oceanic Destruction
By Alan B. Sielen / Foreign Affairs
From our November/December 2013 Issue

foreignaffairs.com

Of all the threats looming over the planet today, one of the most alarming is the seemingly inexorable descent of the world’s oceans into ecological perdition. Over the last several decades, human activities have so altered the basic chemistry of the seas that they are now experiencing evolution in reverse: a return to the barren primeval waters of hundreds of millions of years ago.

A visitor to the oceans at the dawn of time would have found an underwater world that was mostly lifeless. Eventually, around 3.5 billion years ago, basic organisms began to emerge from the primordial ooze. This microbial soup of algae and bacteria needed little oxygen to survive. Worms, jellyfish, and toxic fireweed ruled the deep. In time, these simple organisms began to evolve into higher life forms, resulting in the wondrously rich diversity of fish, corals, whales, and other sea life one associates with the oceans today.

Yet that sea life is now in peril. Over the last 50 years -- a mere blink in geologic time -- humanity has come perilously close to reversing the almost miraculous biological abundance of the deep. Pollution, overfishing, the destruction of habitats, and climate change are emptying the oceans and enabling the lowest forms of life to regain their dominance. The oceanographer Jeremy Jackson calls it “the rise of slime”: the transformation of once complex oceanic ecosystems featuring intricate food webs with large animals into simplistic systems dominated by microbes, jellyfish, and disease. In effect, humans are eliminating the lions and tigers of the seas to make room for the cockroaches and rats.

The prospect of vanishing whales, polar bears, bluefin tuna, sea turtles, and wild coasts should be worrying enough on its own. But the disruption of entire ecosystems threatens our very survival, since it is the healthy functioning of these diverse systems that sustains life on earth. Destruction on this level will cost humans dearly in terms of food, jobs, health, and quality of life. It also violates the unspoken promise passed from one generation to the next of a better future......