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News and Articles
SAWAS: Changing water governance in India.
Posted on 27 Jul, 2009 02:41 PMSAWAS (South Asian Water Studies) calls for papers on longer-term perspectives on water governance and management (reform) in India. The papers should not exceed 5000 words (including references and footnotes). We are inviting original, well argued and accessibly written analyses of water sector reform experiences, assessments of future developments, discussion of dilemmas and contradictions, accounts of policy processes and policy instruments, etc.
Papers are to be submitted to Dr Daphne Gondhalekhar at ZEF, Bonn (daphneg@mit.edu) not later than September 30, 2009. Papers will be peer reviewed. Accepted (and eventually revised) papers will be published in a forthcoming issue of SAWAS (South Asian Water Studies)
For more information on the broad thematic aimed at, please download the Information Click here
"Blue Gold -World Water Wars" : A must see movie for environment and water enthusiasts
Posted on 23 Jul, 2009 10:53 PMThere is no other word that can aptly describe water - Blue Gold. Today I was watching the movie - Blue Gold - World Water Wars. A must see movie for environment and water enthusiasts. The movie starts with a true story of a Californian gold hunter - how his body got transformed into a quasi corpse in seven days because of lack of water. The story then moves on how we humans are using water without discretion. Here are some interesting statistics:
- Manufacturing an average automobile requires 350,000 liters
- Upto 7 barrels of water is required to extract a barrel of oil - Save oil to save water
- One microchip requires 32liters of water
- Today there are 50,000 large dams worldwide
- Today there are at least 10 publicly traded water indices
- 750 pounds of carcass requires 5.2 million liters of water - be a vegetarian and save water.
- 30,240 liters of water is required per 50pound bag of wheat! Don't waste food my friends.
- 1.8 million liters per bale of cotton - Don't buy too many clothes (don't wear too less either)
- 77,500 liters of water is required per 50pound bag of rice. One kilo of rice requires 3,500 litres of water
- 99 liters for an apple
- 107 liters for a banana
- 22,000 liters of water per 50pound bag of corn
- 10 litres for a rose
Book review of "The Humanure Handbook" by Joseph Jenkins, dealing with composting the human excreta
Posted on 23 Jul, 2009 10:52 PMCurrently I am reading this book - "The Humanure Handbook" by Joseph Jenkins. I am impressed. If there is one thing human beings don't want to talk about, it is their excreta. I don't remember discussing managing the excreta with anyone - either at home or at school.
Ethical consumerism: An Australian community bans bottled water
Posted on 19 Jul, 2009 06:31 AMLast Wednesday, this rural Australian town 100 miles south of Sydney, made history with its near-unanimous consensus to ban the sale of bottled water. At the town meeting of 350 voters, only 2 voted against the ban. This indicates an increasing awareness of the futility of the bottled water and its drain on natural resources. The landmark decision comes right after the State-wide ban in New South Wales, where State departments and agencies have been restrained from buying bottled water, calling it “a waste of money and natural resources”.
Rohini Nilekani: "A fine balance in Kutch"
Posted on 17 Jul, 2009 07:27 PMFrom Rohini Nilekani's "Uncommon Ground" column in Livemint
As always, the monsoon may or may not come in time and in adequate quantity across the country. As always, again, people who live in the dry areas of the country, especially in the western desert districts of Rajasthan and Gujarat, with less than 250mm of average annual rainfall, will have to cope with scarcity, as they do year on year. Last week, I was in the Kutch region, on work, with soaring temperatures and no promise of rain despite an unusual cloud cover. We travelled a couple of hundred kilometres in the clay desert, despairing at the spread of Prosopis juliflora which—like so many other foreign species brought in by the forest department with all good intentions—has now overpowered large tracts of the countryscape, to the detriment of useful, hardy local species. We also marvelled at the raw beauty of the dry landscape, which yielded sudden delights such as a male nilgai in his prime and slender green bee-eaters diving gracefully in search of prey. Arid districts such as Kutch in Gujarat, and Barmer and Jaisalmer in Rajasthan mainly have livestock economies and it is not unusual to see thousands of animals—goats, cows, sheep, buffaloes and camels—moving amiably along in search of the next watering hole. It seems counter-intuitive that areas with such low rainfall should provide neighbouring states with meat and milk. IWMI (the International Water Management Institute) has done unique research to show how there is a massive export of virtual water from dry regions to wet through the sale of these products, leaving open some interesting questions on policy.
A survey for household water and sanitation (ASHWAS)
Posted on 15 Jul, 2009 11:27 PMThe Water Portal had previously covered ASHWAS, an ambitious water and sanitation survey in Karnataka conducted by Arghyam and partner organisations.
An interactive, animated tool on good water management by CEE and UNEP
Posted on 14 Jul, 2009 03:25 PMAn interactive, animated tool on good water management by CEE and UNEP
Watch Movie
CPWD adopts Uniform Plumbing Code (UPC-I) - India
Posted on 09 Jul, 2009 09:33 AMAn earlier press release from IAPMO (International Association of Plumbing and Mechanical Officials) announced the Uniform Plumbing Code - India (UPC-I) and the PEEP (Plumbing Education to Em
Dr. GD Agarwal's fast to resume
Posted on 09 Jul, 2009 01:57 AM
- The state government of Uttarakhand promised immediate suspension of all works on the two projects Bhairoghati and Pala-Maneri in its letter of 19th June, 2008 and expressed its full commitment for conservation of River Bhagirathi in its natural form ‘from Gangotri to Uttarakashi’. However construction work on the projects (particularly on Pala Maneri project) leading to destroy Gangaji is going on in full swing. The above makes all assurances to us and to Maa Gangaji look as mere jokes.
- The Government of India committed immediate stoppage of all work on its project Loharinag-Pala in its letter on 19th February, 2009. But the construction work on the site has gone on un-stopped and on an accelerated speed. This again is an act of cruel deceipt.
MWR directed to make the Ganga basin studies public : SANDRP
Posted on 07 Jul, 2009 02:16 AMIn order that is likely to have far reaching implications on water governance in India, the Central Information Commission(CIC) has directed the Union Ministry of Water Resources (MWR) that “any study about water-flow in the river systems of the country must be made available to the general public for its information and education. It is not open to the public authority to hold secret critical information with which lives of millions may be related. Publication of this data informs the people about how the public authority is discharging its appointed functions and whether it was acting accountably about a matter so critical as the nation’s water resources in general and the river systems in particular.” Following an appeal by SANDRP, the CIC has asked the MWR make public the reports of the Central Water Commission & National Institute of Hydrology on the impacts of the hydropower projects on Bhagirathi River in Uttarakhand and for portions that the ministry decides not to make public, “Reasons for holding these parts of the information confidential will have to be recorded, which should be open to scrutiny.” This entire task is to be completed in three months.