Blog Action Day: WaterBy Jon Miller | Post Date: October 15, 2010 7:29 AM | Comments: 6
Today is Blog Action Day and the theme is "water". We are calling attention to the issue of water and how our wasteful use of this resource is threatening all of us. The Blog Action Day website lists some statistics:
Jamie Flinchbaugh wrote there is no water problem and he is right. There is no single water issue can pin down and solve, there are many. Water is the medium that turns our wasteful and selfish behaviors into deadly problems for other people. We can't always see the cause-and-effect relationship between how we use water in our homes, food service supply chains and factories, because the people who feel the effects are far away and without means to cry out to us in protest. As a concrete examples of how local consumer behaviors can have non-local effects, here is another statistic from the Blog Action Day website:
This doesn't mean we can't enjoy our hamburgers, chips and beer, but to those with greater power, greater responsibility. We may individually have only limited power but as a community and society we can increase awareness, encourage others and find more water-efficient ways to live. We can see an example of a corporation taking this responsibility in the article Molson Coors Workers Pledge to Save 700K Gallons of Water a Month. Through their Water Stewardship Month activity, over 1,000 volunteers from 10 breweries across the USA, Canada and the UK joined forces with their communities in water protection work. I'll drink to that. We live in one world. We share one global water cycle. Sooner or later what goes around comes around, and the troubles from a lack of water will come around sooner than we like if we don't each work to increase awareness and care for our shared water supply.
you are all wet Poster: mike R | Post Date: October 15, 2010 7:38 PM Dear Jon, Poster: John Santomer | Post Date: October 15, 2010 11:00 PM and 1 kg. of coffee requires 2000 kgs of water!!! "theres enough in this world for everyones needs, but not enough for one man's greed". Thanks!
Poster: sharma | Post Date: October 18, 2010 2:58 AM Great post. I love appropriate technology solutions (very lean-like, very worthwhile, and very sustainable – you mention the importance of that). Here are some good efforts to work on water solutions http://engineering.curiouscatblog.net/2008/12/11/high-school-inventor-teams-mit/ I like how blogs allow (by providing the authors a audience) to focus attention on ideas worth addressing. Keep up the great work with this blog. Thanks. Poster: John Hunter | Post Date: October 18, 2010 7:46 AM There is a great non profit organization that is working around the world to help solve this problem: Water For People http://www.waterforpeople.org/ They don't just build a well or a composting toilet, they develop the expertise and infastructure needed so that when they leave, the improvement is self-sustaining. Poster: harley | Post Date: October 22, 2010 1:31 PM |




The fact about the hamburger needing so much water caught me by surprise.
I am a vegetarian, so I am supporting water preservation in some way.
Water is our next commodity.