Category: power

  • World Water Day 2021 in Review

     World Water Day
    2021 (in the rear-view mirror): Valuing Water.

    World Water Day (March 22, 2021) is past (www.WorldWaterDay.org)  By now
    you should have taken the
    Water
    Day Quiz
    at SustainZine.
    It’s been about 10 years since I developed such a quiz. I had to work to
    improve and update the original quiz… It is still tricky to get good answers to
    some of these water-critical issues. Often the water usage is available to the
    homeowner, 
    but gets confusing as the data is aggregated for the state and for
    the nation. The more abstract uses of water, like virtual water, are erratic
    and imprecise. Important concepts, but the answers are fuzzy.

    Here is my Water
    Day Quiz
    for 2021; if you haven’t already done it, please complete before
    going further. It’s important to know what you know, and what you don’t know
    related to water systems. It is surprisingly hard to develop this quiz because
    the numbers are all over the map. I have 15 multiple guess questions. Answer
    them all before starting to Google the answers. For which questions do you have
    a high confidence in your original answer? I’m trying to use current stats;
    different sources give different estimates, sometimes old news is no longer
    accurate (maybe it never was accurate). I generally used US and US units of
    measure unless specifically indicated otherwise. Answers, scoring and sources are
    presented in the next sections.

    Thanks for playing the game. It’s a
    serious game though, because lives and livelihoods now and into the future
    depend on how we sustainably address water issues.

    Water Facts: The Water
    Resources of Earth

    Over 70% of our Earth’s
    surface is covered by water (we should really call our planet “Ocean”
    instead of “Earth”). Although water is seemingly abundant, the real
    issue is the amount of fresh water available. 

    • 97.5%
      of all water on Earth is salt water, leaving only 2.5% as fresh
      water 
    • Nearly
      70% of that fresh water is frozen in the icecaps of Antarctica
      and Greenland; most of the remainder is present as soil moisture, or
      lies in deep underground aquifers as groundwater not accessible to human
      use. 
    • <
      1% of the world’s fresh water (~0.007% of all water on earth) is
      accessible for direct human uses. This is the water found in lakes,
      rivers, reservoirs, and those underground sources that are shallow enough
      to be tapped at an affordable cost. Only this amount is regularly renewed
      by rain/snowfall, and is therefore available on a sustainable basis. 
      Source:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_distribution_on_Earth

    With water everywhere (70% of the earth’s surface), it is
    hard to image people without fresh drinking water and clean sanitation, but the
    numbers are pretty ugly. About 780M people do not have running water according
    to the World Health Organization (www.WHO.INT); but you might see 2.1B (about
    25% of the world’s population) who don’t have clean running water at home. And
    probably about 2B do not have safe septic/sewer
    (https://www.who.int/en/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/sanitation) Who estimates
    that 4.5B (almost 60%) of the world’s population do not have safe toilets at
    home.   (Some people might argue, that if
    you don’t have clean septic, you really don’t have clean water, because it gets
    contaminated in normal household operations.)

    The health implications of this are massive. Direct
    ailments, hospitalizations and deaths are staggering. Poor water and sanitation
    contribute to diseases such as cholera, diarrhoea, dysentery, hepatitis A,
    typhoid and polio.  A WHO study in 2012
    estimated that for “every US$ 1.00 invested in sanitation, there was a return
    of US$ 5.50 in lower health costs, more productivity, and fewer premature
    deaths.”

    Probably 50% of the US fresh water is
    polluted… as in no swimming, and you should not eat the fish (if any). If it is
    that bad in the US, imagine how horrible it is in some of the developing
    countries. In short, we need to stop treating water like dirt! And definitely stop
    use rivers and streams as a sewer dump.

    How
    much water do you use per day?

    Indirectly
    and directly, the average person in the US uses more than 1,500 to 2,000
    gallons of water per day. This varies a lot by season and by area. Let’s start
    with the more direct usages of water. The EPA provides average usage at home:

    ·        
    300 gallons per household directly.
    (roughly 120 gals per person)

    ·        
    210 gallons (70%) of that water used in
    households is indoors, mostly in the bathroom (toilets, showers, faucets)

    ·        
    12%-13% of indoor water used is wasted from
    leaks!

    ·        
    Much of the outdoor water is wasted as
    well.
     

    Use EPA resources here:
    https://www.epa.gov/watersense/how-we-use-water.

    Ensia provides a great visualization including state-by-state differences:
    https://ensia.com/articles/water-use/

    Various sources give higher averages. Compute your own water footprint based on
    your lifestyle here:
    https://www.watercalculator.org/footprint/the-water-footprint-of-energy/ 

    How
    many gallons of water does it take to…?

    Water to power a 60-Watt light bulb?
    It takes a lot of water to generate electricity using coal, natural gas or
    nuclear power. Nuclear requires the most water to generate electricity.
    Estimates are that it takes between 3,000 and 6,000 gallons of water to produce
    electricity for a 60-watt light bulb, 12 hours per day, for a year! Heating
    water (NatGas, Coal, Nuclear) for steam turbine power generation uses lots of
    water; they generally take water out of the river and return most of it further
    downstream after partial cooling (maybe 10% evaporates, however). If the water
    source dries up (or freezes) the power plant may need to be idled. Hydro
    electric from dams simply redirects the downstream flow of the water, so the
    water impact is in the change in water flows (when power is needed) and evaporation
    of the increased surface area in a dam.

    Wind power and photovoltaic solar power do
    not use any water in operations to produce electricity. The power mix of the
    local utility determines the savings of water and CO2 each year from a switch
    to solar power on the home or business.

    Buying an electric vehicle (EV) may not be
    such a great savings if charged from the local power utility that has a heavy
    footprint. Installing solar and charging mainly from direct sun power is much
    better.

    But what about gasoline (before adding in
    a 10% ethanol mix)?

    It takes lots and lots of water to produce
    oil. The drilling process, conventional or fracking, takes huge amounts of
    water, and it contaminates water. Fracking for oil (and NatGas) can produce
    about 0.5 barrels of waste water for every barrel of oil (Duke University
    citing a 2015 fracking study:
    https://today.duke.edu/2015/09/frackfoot).
    But then the crude has to be refined, which takes energy and water. There is
    less processing needed for jet fuel and diesel, but gasoline requires about 0.7
    gallons of water per gallon of fuel.

    Ethanol requires a surprising amount of
    water during procession. Ethanol from corn, for example, requires about 10
    gallons of water for every gallon produced; and that’s not counting the water
    required to grow the corn, if corn is the ethanol feedstock. It takes a
    whopping 20-30 gallons of water to make the corn needed for 1 gallon of
    ethanol. (It takes about 1.25 gallons of ethanol, however, to make the equivalent
    power as 1 gallon of gasoline.)

    Water to create a pound of food?
    (See Water Calculator on this.).
    It takes a lot of water to grow crops, and a massive amount to produce animals
    for food. This has been referred to as virtual water. It takes 37 gallons of
    water for a cup of coffee counting everything from grow coffee beans, to
    cleaning them, and to brewing the coffee. 
    To grow a pound of potatoes requires only 31 gallons; beans, 43; and
    corn, 109. BUT it requires a huge amount of water to produce animal products,
    since you have to grow the corn or hay first in order to feed it to animals. It
    requires 371 gallons to produce a pound of cheese; eggs, 400 (8 x 2oz);
    chicken, 469; pork, 756; and 1,857 gallons of water to produce a single pound
    of beef. Wow! Not only is it healthier for you to eat lower on the food chain,
    but it would save massive amounts of water (and energy).

    Oh, and it requires a huge amount of water
    to produce clothes too — to grow the cotton, but the water intensive
    processing required to make cloth and ultimately clothes. It takes 2,000+
    gallons of water to produce one pair of blue jeans!  Countries that are net importers of foods,
    clothes and other finished products are, essentially, also importing water
    inherent in them. (See
    https://www.watercalculator.org/footprint/the-hidden-water-in-everyday-products/)

    The Nexus of Water and Energy.
    As you can see, power generation and food production require large amounts of
    water. Similarly, water requires energy in many ways. Hydroelectric generation
    from water in dams is a direct relationship. Other requirements of energy are
    simply to get water from wherever it is, to wherever it is needed. Energy is
    needed to purify water. It takes about 10% of the energy produced in the US to move
    water around and process it.

    With only about 1% of the world’s water as
    available fresh water, an obvious way to get fresh water is desalination of salt
    water. Unfortunately, desalinization is rather expensive. It is much easier and
    cheaper to pump water from the mainland to islands (St. Petersburg and Key
    West).




    It takes a lot of water (and typically oil and NatGas)
    to make plastics. Lots of energy, and lots of water, to mine, refine,
    manufacture and ship everything. Recyclings of plastics, paper and metals still
    takes water and energy, but far less than the resources used than the original
    products that started in the mines.

    Oh… If you want to know your water footprint you can go
    here: http://waterfootprint.org/en/resources/interactive-tools/personal-water-footprint-calculator/

    The last time I ran the calculator it estimates that I
    consume about 2,100 cubic meters of water per year.  If my math is right, that is about 1,800
    gallons per day! The US average is more than 1,000. 

    So What Can I Do Right Now?

    Measure and monitor. You need to measure
    and monitor regularly to have a consistent impact on your usage, and your improved
    savings from each initiative.

    Savings. Reduce what you
    use saves you money, saves resources, and saves water. Directly, you can
    usually use 20 to 25% less water in homes. Each state and most counties will
    offer water savings tips that are relevant to the locale; in Volusia County
    Florida here are 25 tips.
    https://www.volusia.org/services/growth-and-resource-management/environmental-management/natural-resources/water-conservation/25-ways-to-save-water.stml

    The gallon that is never saved, and never
    used, is called a NegaGallon.

    As you have seen, most of the water you
    used is indirectly, so reducing travel and using less electricity are important
    places to start.

    Telework. Some of us are
    getting tired of Zoom meetings, but the savings are massive from telework (and
    other types of avoided travel). The NegaGallon of gasoline is petrol that is never
    used and therefore never drilled, refined, shipped, and burned in your car.

    Electricity.
    Do an energy audit if you haven’t already done so; it’s free from your local power
    utility. Energy-ize your home and businesses. NegaWatt. That’s the kilowatt of
    power that you never used: it never had to be fracked, piped to a refinery,
    shipped to the power plant, burned to produce power. No trees were killed, no
    greenhouse gasses produced.

    So
    What?

    So energy and water are very closely
    interconnected. It’s important to conserving water and to use it wisely.
    Unfortunately, as with most things sustainability-related, the people who deal
    with energy, don’t generally deal with water management, and vice versa.
    Sustainability requires an integrated approach to most things, especially water
    and energy.

    Imagine what happens if the rest of the
    world consumed resources as we do. The Water Use Around the Word InfoGraphic shows that US water use is
    156 per person per day, but we know that the real number is 10 times that, all
    things considered. And our usage is twice that of Europe (France) and 4x India.
    What happens if they start to consume at the same rate as we? Plus, what
    happens as we move toward 10B world population? 

    Expect that water and water management
    will become far more important in the future. Probably as important as oil is
    currently. You should see more disputes over water by states and countries. This
    topic is, accurately, called Water Wars.
     

    FIND OUT MORE:

    ·        
    Use
    EPA starting here:
    https://www.epa.gov/watersense/how-we-use-water.
    Ensia provides a great visualization including state-by-state differences:
    https://ensia.com/articles/water-use/

    ·        
    World Water Day 2021 website: https://www.unwater.org/worldwaterday2021/

    ·        
    UN World Water Development Report 2021: www.unwater.org/publication_categories/world-water-development-report

    ·        
    UN-Water SDG
    6 Data Portal:
    www.sdg6data.org

    INTERSTING LINKS:

    ·        
    WaterFootprint
    Calculator:
    https://www.watercalculator.org/footprint/the-water-footprint-of-energy/

    ·        
    www.WaterMatters.org  (Great, including Florida specific info.)

    ·        
    http://www.worldwaterday.org/  

    ·        
    www.UNWater.org

    ·        
    www.savewaterfl.com  (For details & water-saving tips.)

    ·        
    Bottled Water and Energy:
    A Fact Sheet
    http://www.pacinst.org/topics/water_and_sustainability/bottled_water/bottled_water_and_energy.html
    (old source)

    ·        
    EPA on Water http://www.epa.gov/WaterSense/pubs/waterenergy.html

    ·        
    Save Water Save Energy
    brochure:
    http://www.epa.gov/WaterSense/docs/drops-to-watts508.pdf
    (including facts).

    ·        
    Couple cool Energy-Water
    Nexus sites:
    http://www.eeweek.org/water_and_energy_wise/connection
    and
    http://www.usaid.gov/our_work/environment/water/enviro.notes/enviro.notes.water-energy.pdf
     

    ·        
    Virtual Water: https://mywaterearth.com/what-is-virtual-water/

    Tips
    and easy means to save water.

    • FIRST. Measure
    and monitor. Your pump should not be coming on when no activity is happening;
    your meter should not be moving when all water is turned off. Most utilities
    charge more as you consume (waste?) higher volumes of water.

    • In your house
    check for leaks from faucets and pipes; even the smallest drip
    can waste as much as 75 liters (20 gals) a day.

    In the
    bathroom:

    Flush less — remember the toilet is not an ashtray or
    wastebasket.

    • While brushing
    teeth, shaving, etc., turn off the water.

    • When cold water
    will do, avoid using hot water.

    • Take shorter
    showers — 5 minutes or less.

    • In the shower,
    wet yourself down, turn the water off, lather up, then turn the water on to
    rinse off soap.

    In the
    kitchen:

    • Operate the dishwasher only when you have a full load.

    • Scrape, don’t
    rinse, your dishes before loading in the dishwasher. Run when full.

    • When purchasing
    a dishwasher, consider a water-efficient model.

    • Thaw frozen
    food in the refrigerator or microwave, not under running water.

    • Store drinking
    water in the refrigerator instead of letting the tap run while you wait for
    cool water to flow.

    • When washing
    dishes by hand, fill one sink or basin with soapy water and fill the rinsing
    sink to one-third or one-half full
    — avoid letting the water run continuously in the rinsing sink.

    In the
    laundry:

    • For washers with variable settings for water volume, select the minimum
    amount required per load.

    • If load size
    cannot be set, operate the washer with full loads only.

    • Use the
    shortest wash cycle for lightly soiled loads; normal and permanent press wash
    cycles use more water.

    • Check hoses
    regularly for leaks.

    • Pre-treat
    stains to avoid rewashing.

    In the
    Yard:

    • Most sprinkler systems waste a lot of
    water. Frequently, they waste more than they (should) use. Install rain
    sensors. Carefully monitor the coverage. Change level and frequency based on
    season.

    • Try to switch
    to reclaimed water; it doesn’t need to be processed as much as potable city
    water. Plus, many cities charge for the water you use assuming that all of it
    also goes into the sewer system (separate, but equal, sewer water charges).

    • Plant local
    friendly (Florida friendly) and low care landscapes.
     

    The
    World Health Organization (Who.INT) offers these key water facts:

    • In 2017, 71% of the global
      population (5.3 billion people) used a safely managed drinking-water
      service – that is, one located on premises, available when needed, and
      free from contamination.
    • 90% of the global population
      (6.8 billion people) used at least a basic service. A basic service is an
      improved drinking-water source within a round trip of 30 minutes to
      collect water.
    • 785 million people lack even a
      basic drinking-water service, including 144 million people who are
      dependent on surface water.
    • Globally, at least 2 billion
      people use a drinking water source contaminated with faeces.
    • Contaminated water can transmit
      diseases such diarrhoea, cholera, dysentery, typhoid, and polio.
      Contaminated drinking water is estimated to cause 485 000 diarrhoeal
      deaths each year.
    • By 2025, half of the world’s
      population will be living in water-stressed areas.
    • In least developed countries,
      22% of health care facilities have no water service, 21% no sanitation
      service, and 22% no waste management service.

     Source:
    https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/drinking-water

    #WorldWaterDay
    #WorldWaterDay2021 #ValuingWater #Water2Me #WaterEnergyNexus #WaterFoodNexus
    #SustainZine

  • Babcock Ranch aims to be first solar-powered town in US | USA News | Al Jazeera

    Babcock Ranch aims to be first solar-powered town in US | USA News | Al Jazeera:

    This is in partnership with FPL (Nextera) for the power. The powerplant is already up and running that will support an almost 200,000 home community.  FPL has extended the solar to include 10 megawatts of battery, thus allowing the solar power plant to offer more flexibility to the power grid and on-demand peaking power.

    The 440 acres for the power plant (now with about 350,000 PV panels) were donated to FPL at the Babcock Ranch. The whole town is 100% electric with electric trolley and charging stations. They even have SolarTrees(tm) for you to charge your phone or laptop in the park and demonstrate how solar works.

    This city is west of LaBelle on the way toward Ft Meyers. Very sustainable. Now has several developers building and each home has the “option” to have solar installed.

    Here’s another take with a human touch from FoxNews. Talking about the first people to move into the “city” and the first baby to be born in Babcock Ranch.

    This is a very cool example of how a city can be built from the ground up as sustainable — zero carbon footprint, as it pertains to electricity. There is the obvious question, however, of urban sprawl to suburbia, that has had suburban sprawl.

    In a city, with lots and lots of impermeable surfaces (roofs and parking lots), it would be very possible to retrofit the sustainability solutions.

    Way to go FPL. Within five years (2023), FPL plans to produce more from solar than from coal+NatGas combined. Additionally, FPL’s sister company FPL Energy is the largest wind producer in the US, and 2nd largest in the world. !:-)  … NextEra is the publicly ~$75B market cap holding company (NEE).

    FPL does have some nuclear, with plans and approval for expansion. The Turkey Point plant has been problematic and has its own set of issues. Leaks in the cooling canals, and no real plan for ways to store nuclear waste, has the Sierra Club (a group that should generally be friendly to nuclear) up in arms.  They also don’t like some of the sweet-heart deals for FPL that have been approved (rubber-stamped) by the Florida Public Service Commission (PSC). The sneaky and deceptive amendment on the Florida ballet last year — a move designed to kill solar — by the southern power companies (in which FPL donated $8m) is still fresh in the minds of Floridians.

    Nuclear in general has issues in the future energy mix. Nuclear is wonderful for base load, but not great as a peaking power source. If/when we move seriously and definitively toward solar in Florida, there should be high renewable energy at various times throughout the day, and none during rain or at night, so nuclear continues to be less effective. See how California is planning the retirement of the Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant and looking for other forms of peaking power as more and more power comes from renewables. Nuclear plants seem to have no plan, of any kind, as to what to do with nuclear wast; the only plan seems to be to hold on-site forever.

    At some point the power monopolies need to deal with the reality that every home and every business can and will generate part or all of their electricity. This means that the future of the grid is connecting power creators with power consumers using a smart grid and dynamic pricing. Part of the day I may be a net producer, part of the night I may be a net consumer. One analogy of this type of Smart Grid is to think of it like the Internet. Sometimes I’m uploading content, sometimes I’m downloading. The Internet directs from where power is produced, to where it is needed. The Smart Grid power company will be more like the Internet Service Provider (ISP) of old by providing power as needed, where needed. The internet of things (IoT), but with power, is essentially what we’re talking about. Maybe the Energy of Everything (EoE)?:-)

    Power companies need a new business model (currently the model is based on ROE with the PSC assuring prices that justify a good return on investment). Producing and selling more and more electricity to make more and more money is a broken model. Building bigger and grander centralized power plants is horribly inefficient; about 60% of energy is lost in the production (steam) and distribution.

    We are really glad to see FPL’s effort into solar. Florida, and NextEra, could do more. Time for the power monopolies to make the change before they get overrun. The power model is changing… Trying to block this massive change is a little like stacking rocks in front of a glacier …

    ‘via Blog this’

  • Solar and wind just passed another big turning point, Cheaper n Better

    Solar and wind just passed another big turning point:

    So solar and wind power generation is reaching a threshold where renewable energy is cheaper than fossil fuel-based power in Germany and UK. That is before counting the subsidies for renewables, and ignoring the massive externality costs of our historically favorite dirty black fuel.

    Note the discussion of the virtuous cycle of renewable fuels. As base load power moves up from 5% renewables the costs of traditional power plants becomes more expensive, essentially they become more peak-power generators and less base-load power.

    Solar has the added advantage of offing more distributed power generation, usually at the point of use. So solar starts to really cut down on the massive loss of power over distribution channels.

    In the US, really cheap NatGas is a no-brainer decision for converting coal plants. It is so much cleaner in all respects. But new fossil fuel power plants will be harder and harder to justify to shareholders and to the PSC.

    In the meanwhile, nuclear sits on the sidelines, leaving fission and fusion as a non option in the foreseeable future.

    If momentum builds for homeowners and businesses to move to at-source power generation (say Solar City), the building momentum could be a real game-changer.

    ‘via Blog this’

  • FPL gets approval to charge customers for fracking investment… The Real Story.

    FPL gets approval to charge customers for fracking investment | Tampa Bay Times:

    I was astounded to here that FPL is getting into the Fracking business. There’s this baloney about trying to save some money for their investors. FPL Customers pay, in advance, to drill Nat Gas wells in Alabama, and then reap some of the benefits of the wells, if any, in the form of low NatGas prices in the future.


    It sounds too good to be true. And leaves you shaking your head as to why a publicly regulated power utility would wonder off the path into the woods looking for firewood and NatGas.


    So the Fla PSC rubber stamped the deal. As they always do. (Although the PSC turned down a petition to pay for Federal Lobbying, an obvious red herring in the mix.)

    Comes to find out that NextEra, the parent company of FPL, already has oil drilling interests… 


    There are many reasons why a power company might want to get into the drilling business, but the one given seems like the very last on the list.

    Water, maybe. Fracking takes huge amount of water, as does power generation.

    Pipe lines. Power companies already have massive right-of-ways related to power lines. This seems like a perfect fit: run power through the line and gas through the ground.

    The one I like best would be to capture the NatGas that is flared in oilfields, produce power and send the power off to the grid through wire. We currently flare half of all NatGas produced in the USA. Nobody really wants to talk about it, but probably more than half. (Better to flare it, then release the methane, but still a very ugly and wasteful business).

    Here seems to be the answer: Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) through pipelines to markets, domestic and abroad. We in the US pay only bout 1/3 of what the rest of the world pays for NatGas. At about $3.50 per unit for us, and maybe $10-$12 for most other countries. Liquidification and shipping LNG is in the works on many fronts. Cheniere Energy, Inc.
    (trading symbol LNG) is coming on board with export terminals with a vengeance. 

    Imagine what it will look like when our mountains of NatGas start to look like mountains of dollars.

    So what does this mean in the next era of power utilities? I don’t really know. It should take some time to understand the maze and the interlinking parts. 

    Here is discussion about Spectra Energy (drilling and such) and FPL and the pipeline in existence and/or planned. LAKE.org article. There’s a pipeline through the Gulf…

    So very interesting.

    And, of course, it has to be mentioned: NatGas is far better than that other major fuel (not mentioning any names, like Coal), but it is still not a renewable resources. Non-sustainable, by any other name, is still a broken business model… It’s just a mater of time.

    ‘via Blog this’

  • World Water Day 2014 — March 22

    Welcome to the World
    Water Day of 2014:
    This
    year’s theme is Water & Energy.
    By
    the Way:
    Earth Day is coming in a month, April 22!!!
    Look for Seminar information.
    See the 2011
    SustainZine post
    related to World Water Day.

    Some info is borrowed here.
    World Water Day
    The
    44th World Water Day (March 22, 2014):
    http://www.unwater.org/worldwaterday/
      World Water Day can easily flooded past us without
    most of us hearing a drop about it.!:-(  And
    why is that, you may be wondering? Or not… The problem with this, and most
    things sustainability related, is where to start.  And how do we put the critical sustainability
    issue of water onto our daily radar screen.

    Water,
    Water, Everywhere…
      Water, so critical to life can be devastating in its
    absence. It can be devastating in abundance. Australia, plagued with decades of
    drought, finally got rain in 2011: it had an area flooded the size of Germany
    and France combined!  This was followed
    in February with Cyclone Yasi in the northeast. (A cyclone is the Pacific version of a hurricane… and, yes, they went
    through the alphabet to get to Y.) We know a lot about hurricanes for two years
    starting in 2004 giving us in Florida 3 or 4 per year including Katrina that
    also hit New Orleans.
      Then in the Winter of 2013-2014 we got snow, and
    more snow (let’s call that a polar vortex). In the meantime Europe (England) got
    drowned in rain.
    But the quiet pain associated with water is very
    easily preventable with very little money. More than 1 billion of our world’s
    6.9B population have inadequate drinking water with an additional 1B having
    inadequate sanitation. The result is that more than 3.5 million people die each
    year because of easily preventable water-related diseases (World Health
    Organization at
    www.WHO.int).
     Approximately half of the world’s
    hospital beds are taken by water and hygiene-related diseases (
    http://water.org/learn-about-the-water-crisis/facts/).  [This should be updated, it has improved
    since 2011.]

    The
    Nexus of Energy with Water, Paper, Plastic and Transportation.
      Few people realize how much water it takes to
    produce energy. How much water to power a light bulb, for example? To power a
    60 watt bulb 12 hours per day for a year? How about 3,000 to 6,000, depending
    on the power source, it could be more or less. See here.
      The water doesn’t go away, per se. Water might be
    taken in upstream, used to produce steam and power turbines and then released
    downstream.  Give a look at the Nexus
    sections in the outline on the last page of
    Climate Changes and Sustainability, a
    WikiBook
    : http://tinyurl.com/SustainYBook

    Power and the Nexus of Energy, Water,
    Paper, Plastic, etc. are discussed in Wikipdedia:
    World
    Water Day
      World Water Day was initiated to try to solve health
    and wellness problems around the world where people have poor water and
    sanitation. The UN has a 10 year program to attempt to overcome the pain and
    death associated with inadequate water by 2015. Progress has been made, but it
    is slow.
    WATER STATS: Most of
    the earth’s surface (70%+) is water. Yet only about 2.5% is freshwater. (The
    salt in oceans and some lakes make it unusable for drinking, agriculture, etc.
    without expensive desalinization processing.) Of the world’s freshwater 68.7%
    is in ice caps and glaciers, 30.1% is underground, ~1% is other, and barely
    0.3% is fresh surface water! That’s about 0.009% of our total is fresh surface
    water. Freshwater is lakes (87%), swamps (11%) and rivers (2%). So as we divert
    and consume the fresh water available to us – taking from rivers and aquifers –
    the impacts become ever greater as rivers dry and ancient aquifers are depleted.
    This year the theme is Water & Energy. Most people don’t realize the Nexus of Water
    and Energy.

    The
    Water Bubble and Water Wars
      The water bubble may be coming faster
    than we originally thought… Water sources, especially the invisible
    underwater aquifers are being depleted. 
    This will show in increased prices for water, water shortages and food
    shortages/prices (Marks, 2009). “We’re fast draining the fresh water resources
    our farms rely on, warns Lester Brown, president of the Earth Policy Institute”
    (George, 2011). Our own Ogallala Aquifer in the high plans of the US (underground
    aquifer from Texas through Wyoming) will be depleted in about 25 years. (See
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ogallala_Aquifer.).

      Water
    wars and water conflicts are expected to increase dramatically. Counties (and
    states) that are at the headwaters of rivers can take all the water and leave
    nothing for the cities, farmers and fishermen below. 

      Worst case, and a horrible
    example, is the Aral Sea. What used to be the world’s 4th largest
    lake is now mostly dry, highly salty and toxically polluted. Russia has been consuming
    the water that would have run downstream (and through) the former USSR state of
    Kazakhstan. (See
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aral_Sea
    and the following news video:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e8b0svfuO_k
    at Russia Today.)
      The truth of the matter is… that water
    matters!  …
      Even in Florida where we are surrounded
    by H2O.

    What can we do?
      Basically, we need to become more
    informed about the sustainability impact of all we say and do. We need to
    become more informed consumers of water. Maybe compute our water footprint.
    Please fill out the H2O Footprint calculator.
    We need to start conserving more water, more energy and more resource. (Recycling
    actually saves huge amounts of energy and water.)
     1)     
    Compute your water footprint
    (and take actions to reduce it):
    a.      
    H2O Footprint: http://www.h2oconserve.org (Water footprint calculator.)
    c.      
    Water footprint of food,
    products, etc.:
    http://www.waterfootprint.org
    2)     
    The average American uses
    2,000 gallons per day, more than twice the global average when all things are
    considered. (Most of the statistics will show only about 1,000 gpd, but they
    don’t include food, energy, etc.)
    3)     
    For Florida-centric details
    & water-saving tips, please visit:
    www.WaterMatters.org and www.savewaterfl.com.
    4)     
    References and links below.
    Look for information about Earth Day
    2014 coming up on Tuesday April 22.

    Thanks for listening, reading, and thinking about
    sustainability.

    Let’s be good stewards of our God-given resources:
    water and more.

    Some References
    George, L. (2011, Feb. 2) Earth economist: The food
    bubble is about to burst . New Scientist.
    Retrieved from:  
    http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20927986.400-earth-economist-the-food-bubble-is-about-to-burst.html
    Marks, S. J. (2009). Aqua shock: The water crisis in America. NY, NY: Bloomberg Press.
    Some Links:
    ·        
    Official
    site
    :
    http://www.unwater.org/worldwaterday/
    ·        
    http://www.UNWater.org
    ·        
    http://www.Water.org
    ·         http://worldwater.org/