BLOG
Courtesy of Circle of Blue, part two of an interesting look at India’s food, water, and energy challenge: The good news is that India’s government has started to shift its priorities in terms of how it manages the country’s economy and natural resources. Some changes are visible on the ground: Renewable energy is gaining traction […]
Read more »Via Circle of Blue, a report on some of the sources of India’s food, water, and energy challenge: For two years, the Wilson Center and Circle of Blue have explored the contest for food, water, and energy in India and the troubling ways it plays out across the country. The Yamuna River, a tributary of the Ganga. We […]
Read more »Courtesy of STRATFOR (subscription required), a detailed analysis of the impact of virtual water exports from Australia to China: In the coming decades, Australia’s water resources will be stretched not only by climate and domestic consumption but also through export. Australia will not physically export water; rather, it will virtually export water through its agricultural […]
Read more »Via Reuters, a report on the increasing tendency of fighters targeting vital water plants in the Middle East: Fighters are increasingly targeting water and sanitation facilities across the Middle East, exacerbating severe shortages for agriculture and households, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said on Wednesday. Consumption of water in the volatile region […]
Read more »Via Future Directions International, a report on how development of the US$900 million Red Sea-Dead Sea water sharing project is set to go ahead following the finalisation of the Jordan-Israel water supply agreement in February: Background Accessing enough fresh water to cater to rising demand is an ongoing challenge in the Middle East. For Jordan […]
Read more »Via Green Money, commentary by Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., President of Waterkeeper Alliance: Water has emerged as the target of choice for the robber barons of globalization. As freshwater supplies dwindle, global investors are scrambling to own what’s left. The World Bank already values water privatization at $1 trillion and predicts that many of the wars […]
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