Monday, April 11, 2011

The Worldwide 'Thirst' For Clean Drinking Water

JUST IN TIME...!

""We use purified drinking water to flush our toilets and water our lawns. That doesn't make any sense," says Charles Fishman. "In an era of scarcity, we won't need to limit whether we have water to boil pasta or take a bath. But we will think differently about a whole portfolio of water. There will be different kinds of waters for different uses. And water itself will get smart."

Yesterday, NPR fresh air featured an interview with the author of 'The Big Thirst,' Charles Fishman. They talked about the future of a natural resource that, Fishman says, we can no longer take for granted.

"One of the big problems of water is that the success of the golden age of water has created an invisible system. We don't even take [water] for granted because taking it for granted would suggest we pay attention to it. That hidden system is corroding, and as it corrodes, it even corrodes our support for public water. We think, 'Why should I pay more for water? I'll just go buy bottled water.' But, in fact, we don't actually spend that much money supporting the system. In the U.S., we spend $21 billion a year buying bottled water, and we spend $29 billion a year maintaining the entire water system — pipes, treatment plants, pumps. We spend almost as much on crushable plastic bottles of water as we do maintaining the water system."

Stop taking water for granted!

Listen to the interview: NPR fresh air
More about the Book: The Big Thirst

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