December, 2008

HONOLULU — After a proliferation of electricity outages, the Hawaiian island of Oahu needs to limit its water usage, say officials at the Board of Water Supply. Oahu depends on electric pumps to keep its reservoirs full. During the outages, residents have been withdrawing the resource and water wagons have delivered emergency stock to hospitals.

“We need the time to recharge our pipes and refill our reservoirs. It’s going to take a little bit of time,” the board’s spokeswoman Su Shin told MSNBC. “If people do a really good job of conserving, then we’ll be fine. We’ll be able to get through this without completely losing water. It is 100 percent dependent on how much people conserve.” The board encourages citizens to limit their use to bathing and drinking.

As states across the nation begin to recognize the imminence of water and power crises, the connection between the two forces begins to appear more relevant than ever before.

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Source: MSNBC

 

ohioriver
When officials found high fecal counts in the Ohio River, they decided to initiate a clean-up effort.

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HAMILTON, Ontario — Detroit, Michigan’s Motor City, has been “stealing” Ontario’s water for more than half a century, reports Ontario’s Ministry of the Environment.

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LAGO AGRIO, Ecuador — The headwaters of the Amazon are polluted and those who live with the toxic water blame the Chevron Corporation for their suffering.

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zimbabwestory
Grim consequences of failed water and sanitation infrastructure

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WASHINGTON — Evaporation might be a cool answer to global warming. That, or it could put the earth in even hotter water.

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By Abrahm Lustgarten
ProPublica

David Hasemyer
The San Diego Union-Tribune

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As emerging conflicts in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) displace communities, the nation’s populous is suffering from increasing levels of disease — such as malaria, diarrhea, dehydration and respiratory distress.

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BEIJING — The hydroelectric feat that displaced over a million people is pushing its maximum water level and should reach it next year. The reservoir’s slopes, however, are already beginning to erode — causing numerous landslides.

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detroit1
A troubled metropolitan water and sewer department that serves 4.3 million people in southeast Michigan might finally get the support of Detroit’s populous — city and suburbs alike.

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