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creativesage says...

These students have committed to participate in the Dow Live Earth Run for Water on April 18th and were helping us tell the world about the event by appearing on CBS's The Early Show.

On Tuesday, October 13th, the students at Mott Hall Science and Technology Academy were up at 4:30 A.M. to show their support for clean drinking water. The students have committed to participate in the Dow Live Earth Run for Water on April 18th and were helping us tell the world about the event by appearing on CBS’s The Early Show. It was cold, but the kids from Mott Hall realized that there were kids like them all over the world who didn’t have water in their schools. In fact, half of the world’s schools lack access to clean drinking water and safe sanitation.

The students also attended the official press conference held later that day where Global Water Challenge President, Paul Faeth recognized them for their commitment by. The kids got to take photos with the celebrities in attendance.

The students will be learning about the water issue for the next several months and working with Global Water Challenge to connect with students in poor countries who don’t have access to water now or who didn’t until recently. The culmination of their lessons on the global water crisis will be on April 18th, when the entire Academy will be running/walking in the Dow Live Earth Run for Water. Funds raised in the U.S. will go to water and sanitation projects around the world that GWC is supporting. Every person who runs/walks on April 18th is not only helping by providing funding for these projects, but also by showing their commitment to the issue, and bringing this issue to the forefront of people’s minds.

Mott Hall Science and Technology Academy is a new, public middle school located in South Bronx. The students represent the diversity of the area with a current enrollment of about 130 6th graders, and expanding to 7th and 8th grade over the next two years. It is a rigorous math, science, and technology focused middle school that offers families the opportunity for their children to meet the highest academic expectations and standards, to make smooth transitions to selective high schools, and to compete successfully for admission to top public and private colleges.

Their school culture is characterized by a shared vision for academic excellence, the healthy personal growth of all students, and a commitment to our strong belief that all students can and will succeed in their endeavors.

The students have committed to participate in the Dow Live Earth Run for Water on April 18th and were helping us tell the world about the event by appearing on CBS's The Early Show. It was cold, but the kids from Mott Hall realized that there were kids like them all over the world who do not have water in their schools. In fact, half of the world's schools lack access to clean drinking water and safe sanitation.

 

Credit: Post adapted from Live Earth Blog: http://liveearth.org/en/liveearthblog/mott-hall-science-and-technology-academy-and-live-earth

Filed under: clean water

creativesage says...

 

At a recent press conference, Live Earth announced the Dow Live Earth Run for Water. Jessica Biel, Pete Wentz, Alexandra Cousteau, Angelique Kidjo, and Jenny Fletcher introduce the Dow Live Earth Run for Water, along with Kevin Wall (Live Earth), Ian Barbour (Dow), and Paul Faeth. This followed an announcement on the Live Earth Blog. Here's the Associated Press video clip of Jessica Biel and her colleagues, talking about water:

 

So, it seems our task is two-fold: To bring essential, life-sustaining water to the billions of people in the world who do not have enough clean water; and, for those of us who are lucky enough to live in a country with enough precious water (right now, anyway) to learn to conserve it, as we need to conserve other natural resources.

Conserving and sharing water is essential, locally and globally, to prevent massive disease and also, to sustain the world's food production. As BBC News recently reported: Food production will have to increase by 70% over the next 40 years to feed the world's growing population, the United Nations food agency predicts. The Food and Agricultural Organisation says if more land is not used for food production now, 370 million people could be facing famine by 2050.

The world population is expected to increase from the current 6.7 billion to 9.1 billion by mid-century. Climate change, involving floods and droughts, will affect food production. [Read more here.

Then, there are the economic implications of not successfully managing climate change. Listen to what the Danish Conservative Connie Hedegaard has to say about her fears, if the U.S. ended up as the "biggest loser" in the upcoming Copenhagen Climate Summit, if it is not able to deliver on a global climate agreement this December:

 

You can read more about Ms. Hedegaard's views here.

Look around you, wherever you live right now. What can you do to help conserve and share water, promote the production of healthy foods world-wide, and contribute to a safer climate for everyone around the world? For more specific tips, keep checking at Live Earth. The life you save will be your own, as well as the lives of your family, your friends, and your friends around the globe.

 


GOOD: Drinking Water
by goodmagazine

Filed under: clean water

creativesage says...

[Excerpt by Scott Harrison:]

Author Seth Godin recently wrote that the problem with enormity in marketing is that it doesn't work. He said "Enormity should pull at our heartstrings, but it usually shuts us down. Show us too many sick kids, unfair imprisonments or burned bodies and you won't get a bigger donation, you'll just get averted eyes."


While all this may be true, it just seems rather boring. Visionless. I have to believe people want to sign up for something bigger than just one. I did.


There's a proverb in the Bible that says, "Where there is no vision, the people perish." People are certainly dying all around us, but could that be because we're terrified to tackle the enormous? Because we don't have the faith to see the entire problem solved?


I can't quite see to a billion people yet, but I'm getting closer. Your generosity has helped us do that. In only three years, 60,000 people around the world have donated $11 million. That means 750,000 lives will change. 750,000 people will get clean water to drink.


So in the spirit of solving enormous problems, we want to step it up this September, and serve our first million people. Then keep going until every single person on the planet has clean and safe drinking water.


McDonalds served a billion people, didn't they?


Read more from Charity Water Founder Scott Harrison here. Then, envision what you can do to help give more people clean water. Because it's time for all of us to have an enormous vision, have faith, and then, to act.

Filed under: clean water

Stephen says...

In Planet Water, Steve Hoffmann, the founder of WaterTech Capital, a private investment company in Plano, Texas, that focuses on the water industry, discusses his rationale for investing in the world's most valuable resource.

As Roger Bate writes in his review of the book in the Wall Street Journal, Mr. Hoffmann does an good job of laying out the basics of water scarcity and delivery, and presents a persuasive case for water's looming importance, rivaling oil as the most important commodity this century.

Mr. Bates writes that there are more than 50,000 water-utility companies in the U.S. operate about 160,000 water systems, bringing potable water to cities and far-flung rural communities alike.

Steve Hoffmann writes about investing in water as an investment opportunity, especially as water utilities move toward privatization and away from government management. He says that private management will make companies concentrate on their core competencies to keep efficiencies high; those companies are the ones for investors to pursue. Mr. Hoffmann also sees an opportunity in water regulation.

Roger Bates of the Wall Street Journal writes:

Most of the earth's surface is water-covered, the skies are filled with water-soaked clouds and life on land depends on what falls from those clouds. 97% of the world's water is in salty seas and undrinkable. Of the remaining 3%, the vast majority is trapped in ice caps and glaciers. More than one billion people live without access to clean water, which in any case is rarely priced according to its true value even in developed countries.

Despite clean water's scarcity, though, there would still be plenty of it to go around if we just managed the stuff a bit better. "A water leak just one-fourth inch in diameter can result in a loss of almost 15,000 gallons a day," Mr. Hoffmann reports.

Water distribution systems lose a lot of water, at least 15% in the U.S. and perhaps 30% globally, which has far-reaching economic and public-health implications, given the expense of maintaining water systems and the dire consequences of resorting to using contaminated water. Two million people around the world -- many of them children -- die every year from waterborne illnesses.

According to Mr. Hoffman, old pipes are to blame for most water loss in the U.S., and the situation is getting worse. Mr. Hoffman also states that the rich use far more water than to poor.

On it's website, it says that WaterTech Capital was founded by Mr. Hoffmann, a pioneer in the advancement of the economic value of water who is a resource economist and limnologist by training. He was one of the earliest financiers to recognize the potential of water as an investment theme. In 1987 he published “Water: The Untapped Market “ for the Economic Research Institute, a think tank for free market processes. 

Planet Water by Steve Hoffmann
Wiley, 352 pages, $39.95

Filed under: Clean Water

16hertgenm says...

More than 70% of the world is covered with water, but poor people can
only have one bucket of water each day(2.6 gallons)! Bad water... Every day 14,000 people die because the water they use
contains dangerous chemicals or untreated sewage. It is sad that there are
14,000 people dying every day.....

 Melanie 5T

Filed under: clean water

16elstonr says...

Q1: why are people not getting clean water?
 
Q2: why aren`t the people helping the poor people to get clean water?
 
Ray

Filed under: Clean water

16satom says...

Hello everyone If you want to listen to my student Q`s please listen!!!!
 
1. How has it changed? Has it got bet better or worse?) 2. How do we know if the people with no water doesn`t have a lot of water?
3. What is like to be in a situation like that?( with no water)
4.How did we help?
5. How can we change so it will become better?
 
Moena Sato 5T

Filed under: Clean Water

16tokuyamat says...

What causes poor countries not to have clean water?
 
Tomo 5N

Filed under: clean water

16deshpanden says...

I wonder that how come children like us get clean water but children in
Africa and Cambodia don't?
 
Nachiket 5N

Filed under: Clean Water

16smithj says...

Hi Everyone!
 
My questions are: Why are people not getting enough clean water
and How can we help people that don't get enough clean water? Jovia 5H

Filed under: Clean Water