Water experts warn of Copenhagen blind spot

Climate Crunch | Water experts warn of Copehagen blind spot
Professor Patricia Wouters, Director of the UNESCO Centre for Water
Law, Policy and Science, University of Dundee, today fired a shot across
the bows of climate change negotiators in Copenhagen, warning them not
to ignore one of the planet’s most vital natural resources of all -
water.
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The New Pollutants Brewing in Our Water

Climate Crunch | The New Pollutants Brewing in Our Water
Potomac Conservancy today released its third annual State of the Nation’s River report, calling attention to a variety of pollutants found in the Potomac River that disrupt the endocrine system, which regulates the normal growth and sexual development of vertebrate species, including humans and fish.

The report describes the emergence of these new contaminants in the Potomac River system; features the latest research, exploring the potential relationship of these chemicals to the phenomenon of intersex fish; and reviews shortcomings in current federal and local regulations that are leaving this widespread problem essentially unregulated.
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Africa’s Demand on Nature Approaching Critical Limits

Climate Crunch | Africa's Demand on Nature Approaching Critical Limits
If current population and consumption trends continue, Africa’s Ecological Footprint (a measure of its demand on nature) will exceed its biocapacity within the next twenty years, according to a publication to be released by Global Footprint Network on Tuesday, October 20. A number of countries, including Senegal, Kenya and Tanzania, are set to reach that threshold in less than five years.

The Africa Factbook 2009 reveals that while Africa’s population grew from 287 million to 902 million people between 1961 and 2005, the amount of biocapacity (resources that are available on a renewable basis) per person decreased by 67 percent during this same time span. Though this is reflective of a global trend, it is particularly alarming for Africa, a region where ecological deficits can translate most directly into resource conflicts and shortages of food, fuel and other basic necessities for survival.
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Filed under: Nature

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Cellulose from Wastewater Can Now be Turned into Fuel for Cars

Climate Crunch | Cellulose from Wastewater Can Now be Turned into Fuel for Cars
Qteros of Marlborough, Mass., and Applied CleanTech, based in Israel, today announced that they have developed a novel solution for turning cellulose from municipal and agricultural liquid waste into ethanol fuel for cars. Joint use of the Qteros Q Microbe™ and Applied CleanTech’s Recyllose™ feedstock has been found to boost ethanol production, address sewage sludge disposal problems, and make smaller-scale ethanol plants viable for municipalities from Tel Aviv to Chicago.
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Is London Heading For a Water Crunch?

Climate Crunch | Is London Heading For a Water Crunch?
The warning comes from sustainability experts Envirowise and follows research which found that 70% of sustainability specialists consider the threat of dwindling water supplies to be equal to the impact of carbon emissions, while 54% believe the world will run out of water before it runs out of fuel.

It is predicted that UK groundwater will begin to decrease by 2025, with the overall amount of water available in English and Welsh rivers reducing by 15 per cent by 2050.
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Pure revolutions makes drinking water safe

Climate Crunch | Pure revolutions makes drinking water safe peroflow
Today, Pure Revolution, a company specializing in residential and commercial water purification systems, announces its PureOFlow high-efficiency reverse osmosis is the effective solution to the alarming health hazards of contaminants in tap water.

In April 2009, following a five-month investigation, Associated Press (AP) exposed the legal dumping of pharmaceuticals in the waterways impacting at least 41 million Americans. Around the same time, the Chicago Tribune reported that “for more than two decades, the 11,000 or so residents in this working-class community (Crestwood) unknowingly drank tap water contaminated with toxic chemicals linked to cancer and other health problems.”
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Major Shift To Plant-Based Diets Essential To Avert Water Catastrophe

Major Shift To Plant-Based Diets Essential To Avert Water Catastrophe
In support of World Water Week, August 16-22, 2009, and the corresponding major conference in Stockholm, Sweden, the Veg Climate Alliance, an umbrella group of environmental, vegetarian, health, animal rights and other groups and activists, is urging a major societal shift toward plant-based diets to avoid a major water catastrophe.
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