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MaximsNewsWATER

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THE WORLD'S
WATER 2008-2009: PEAK WATER, CHINA'S WATER CRISIS AND CLIMATE CHANGE
IMPACTS AMONG PRESSING TOPICS EXAMINED BY PACIFIC INSTITUTE:
21/01/2009
(MaximsNews Network)
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UNITED
NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network / 21
January 2009 --Are we
running out of water?
“Is
there such a thing as ‘peak water’? There is a vast amount of water on the
planet—but we are facing a crisis of running out of sustainably managed
water,” said Dr. Peter Gleick, president of the Pacific Institute. “Humans
already appropriate over 50% of all renewable and accessible freshwater flows,
and yet billions still lack the most basic water services.”
Gleick,
a MacArthur Fellow and one of the world’s leading authorities on water, has
for the past decade coauthored and edited the biennial series The World’s
Water, examining global issues around use and misuse of our freshwater
resources. The much anticipated sixth volume from the Pacific Institute, The
World’s Water 2008-2009, addresses topics from “peak water” to climate
change impacts, including a chart on “The Water Content of Things” —from
potato chips to microchips—an eye-opener in terms of our own water footprints.
(This chart, with selected book chapters and data tables, is available online at
www.worldwater.org.)
Key to
the discussion of water today is the concept of “peak water,” which Gleick
and chapter co-author Meena Palaniappan redefine as “peak ecological
water”—the critical point already reached in many areas, where we overtax
the planet’s ability to absorb the consequences of our water use. A prime
example is the water crisis in China, where water resources are over-allocated,
inefficiently used, and grossly polluted by human and industrial wastes, with
300 million people lacking access to safe drinking water.
“China
has developed a set of water quality and quantity problems as severe as any on
the planet,” said Gleick. “Rivers and lakes are dead and dying, groundwater
aquifers are over-pumped, uncounted species of aquatic life have been driven to
extinction, and direct adverse impacts on both human and ecosystem health are
widespread and growing.”
The
World’s Water 2008-2009 explores these issues, including an update on
China’s Three Gorges Dam, the largest integrated water project in history, and
the problems it faces as it nears completion after a decade of controversy.
Additional coauthors Heather Cooley, Michael Cohen, Mari Morikawa, and Jason
Morrison weigh in on business reporting on water, water management in a changing
climate, the progress toward the Millennium Development Goals, urban water use
efficiencies, the Salton Sea, and the Tampa Desalination Plant. With 20 data
tables on global water situations and the newly updated Water Conflict
Chronology, the volume brings the urgency of the issues around sustainable water
management to the fore.
The World’s Water 2008-2009 can be ordered
online through Island Press (www.islandpress.org)
or by calling 800.621.2736. Visit www.worldwater.org
for more information and to access data tables and select content from the
entire series.
For
additional information and downloadable reports on a wide range of water issues,
visit the Pacific Institute website at www.pacinst.org.
Based in Oakland, California, the Pacific Institute is a nonpartisan research
institute that works to create a healthier planet and sustainable communities.
Through interdisciplinary research and partnering with stakeholders, the
Institute produces solutions that advance environmental protection, economic
development, and social equity—in California, nationally, and internationally.
Source: Pacific
Institute
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