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Paperback Water Consciousness: How We All Have to Change to Protect Our Most Critical Resource Book

ISBN: 0975272446

ISBN13: 9780975272442

Water Consciousness: How We All Have to Change to Protect Our Most Critical Resource

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

Water Consciousness is designed to change the way people think about water. It explores all aspects of the water crisis and what we can do about it. Compelling contributions by Bill McKibben, Maude... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Accessible

This book consists of a number of essays on water in a variety of situations around the world. There was not as much science as I would have liked in most of the essays, but they were definitely accessible and understandable for the lay reader on the important issues currently facing us in our use and management of water. Presents water issues as a problem in their own right and in the context of global warming and human health. I believe the title could have been better, it sounds a little new agey, but I think they were referring to the fact that we tend to take water for granted and increased water awareness is needed.

Water Neutral

Kudos to the authors and editor of Water Consciousness. I found this book gave a wide angle view of the world water situation and an equally diverse and expansive set of solutions. As an artist,living in the arid Southwest,I was intrigued by the chapter on water neutrality and green design. The example of a law office in Florida that has incorprated a "Living Machine" into it's architecture seemed especially exciting to me. That they were able to cut their water use by 60% and do so through a 2 story waterfall and plant-filled atrium seemed to me to be the most elegant of solutions.

The most important book on the most important crisis we face (or aren't facing)

In the middle of September of 2008, as the Senate of the United States was pondering an energy bill, all 100 Senators were invited to speak at a Bipartisan Energy Summit. With a national election less than two months away, you may imagine the posturing. But you might not have anticipated this minute-long question. Ladies and Gentlemen, I give you Sheldon Whitehouse, Senator from Rhode Island: WHITEHOUSE: Gentlemen, we're in the middle of a near total mortgage system meltdown in this country. We have a health care system that burns 16 percent of our GDP, in which the Medicare liability alone has been estimated at $34 trillion. We're burning $10 billion a month in Iraq. This administration has run up $7.7 trillion in national debt, by our calculation. And there is worsening evidence every day of global warming, with worsening environmental and national security and economic ramifications. In light of those conditions, do any of you seriously contend that drilling for more oil is the number one issue facing the American people today? (Long silent pause during which nobody answers.) WHITEHOUSE: No, it doesn't seem so. I watched this remarkable moment as I was reading 'Water Consciousness', a book about a crisis that just possibly muscles oil --- and everything else --- aside as the biggest threat to life as we know it. News to you? It certainly would be to our nation's leaders. But consider some facts: -- Right now, 1.3 billion people have no access to clean water and 2.5 billion lack adequate sewage or sanitation. The demand for water doubles every 20 years. At this rate, demand for fresh water will outpace supply by 50% --- in less than 20 years. -- Yes, the earth is mostly water, but 97% of the earth's water is salty. All freshwater-dependent life shares 1% of the earth's water. -- 70% of the water in America we use goes to agriculture. --- That third-of-a-pound burger? It takes 600 gallons of water to grow the corn that feeds the cow that produces just that third of a pound of meat. -- To sustain life, we each need 13 gallons of water a day. In the United States, we each use about 150 gallons. -- Three out of four Americans drink bottled water. One out of five Americans drinks only bottled water. -- National Climate Data Center officials say that 43% of the United States is in "moderate to extreme drought." -- More than 50% of the water that American households use goes for lawns, gardens and pools. In short, we are wasting a resource we can't live without. We are in crisis. And we have not declared any level of emergency. This is not to say we're lost. Smart, serious essays by experienced professionals explain the problem and present some savvy solutions. If you're better read than this water user, perhaps you already know about the importance of watersheds and acequias (communal irrigation systems) and cisterns that collect rainwater --- but let me confess, I read with a pen in hand, and marked a lot. You may not like Big G
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