To Neglect Water...Is To Give It to Multi nationals
- added July 14, 2008
- 6 responses
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- JanforGore
- added this
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Serious and extremely worrying evidence indicates that water supplies are steadily being used up. And the causes of water scarcity are much the same as those of the food crisis: demand exceeds a finite supply.
The world's population is projected to grow from 6 billion to 8.5 billion by 2030 and unless we change the way we use water and increase water productivity — ie. produce more 'crop per drop' — we will not be able to feed them. That is the conclusion of the IWMI's recent Comprehensive Assessment of Water Management in Agriculture and its book, Water for Food, Water for Life, which drew on the work of 700 scientists.
end of excerpt.
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In all of the time I have been posting to this blog on the subject of water scarcity, this message has been the priority. Investing in water infrastructure and educating people in developing countries regarding irrigation methods that save water as well as planting conventional crop varieties that are not as water intensive. However, even though these are the main goals one of the priorities here as well that was also not mentioned in this article is stopping the commoditization and corporatization of water that keeps it from being used by the people as the human right it is.
I have been reporting recently on Current.com (linked here in the column) about Monsanto and its plan to spread GM foods across the globe. Foods which biotech makeup has been linked to possible health effects not only in humans but in cows through Posilac (Bovine growth hormones) in milk, and the environmental affects on waterways through the use of Roundup Herbicides. It is an insidious plan wherein they are buying up seed companies globally and binding farmers to only plant seeds in one season without permission to replant next season unless they continue to buy seed from Monsanto at a huge profit to the company. Monsanto has even gone so far as to 'patent' seed and pursue litigation against farmers they accuse of replanting seeds (as has been done in agriculture from its inception centuries ago) and even harrassing farmers who are innocent due to pollen from other fields landing on their crops. They are also lobbying state legislatures to not label foods that contain bovine hormones and GM ingredients.
But not only is Monsanto in the business of monopolizing seeds of the world and taking away the consumer's right to know, they are also involved in pursuing the privitization of water. Currently they have such projects in India and Mexico which will bring them millions in revenues.They are cornering the market on food and water in developing countries and in the US and by their methods putting farmers in great debt to the point that they are committing suicide in India due to BT cotton.
Therefore, while other explanations for food and water shortages certainly are relevant and deserving of our utmost attention, stopping multi nationals as well from patenting and stealing life is also one of the most important and crucial environmental and moral fights we will have in this century. For whoever controls the food and water controls the world.
So again, we do have enough food and water to feed and sustain the world if we start now to work on plans for the future that conserve these resources and address overpopulation. We don't need The World Bank to continue to scaremonger about this for profit. We don't need Monsantos to take advantage of us for profit. We need a plan that actually educates people about conservation and effective irrigation and infrastructure, and we need to give farming back to the farmers and water back to the people.
The world's population is projected to grow from 6 billion to 8.5 billion by 2030 and unless we change the way we use water and increase water productivity — ie. produce more 'crop per drop' — we will not be able to feed them. That is the conclusion of the IWMI's recent Comprehensive Assessment of Water Management in Agriculture and its book, Water for Food, Water for Life, which drew on the work of 700 scientists.
end of excerpt.
~~~~~
In all of the time I have been posting to this blog on the subject of water scarcity, this message has been the priority. Investing in water infrastructure and educating people in developing countries regarding irrigation methods that save water as well as planting conventional crop varieties that are not as water intensive. However, even though these are the main goals one of the priorities here as well that was also not mentioned in this article is stopping the commoditization and corporatization of water that keeps it from being used by the people as the human right it is.
I have been reporting recently on Current.com (linked here in the column) about Monsanto and its plan to spread GM foods across the globe. Foods which biotech makeup has been linked to possible health effects not only in humans but in cows through Posilac (Bovine growth hormones) in milk, and the environmental affects on waterways through the use of Roundup Herbicides. It is an insidious plan wherein they are buying up seed companies globally and binding farmers to only plant seeds in one season without permission to replant next season unless they continue to buy seed from Monsanto at a huge profit to the company. Monsanto has even gone so far as to 'patent' seed and pursue litigation against farmers they accuse of replanting seeds (as has been done in agriculture from its inception centuries ago) and even harrassing farmers who are innocent due to pollen from other fields landing on their crops. They are also lobbying state legislatures to not label foods that contain bovine hormones and GM ingredients.
But not only is Monsanto in the business of monopolizing seeds of the world and taking away the consumer's right to know, they are also involved in pursuing the privitization of water. Currently they have such projects in India and Mexico which will bring them millions in revenues.They are cornering the market on food and water in developing countries and in the US and by their methods putting farmers in great debt to the point that they are committing suicide in India due to BT cotton.
Therefore, while other explanations for food and water shortages certainly are relevant and deserving of our utmost attention, stopping multi nationals as well from patenting and stealing life is also one of the most important and crucial environmental and moral fights we will have in this century. For whoever controls the food and water controls the world.
So again, we do have enough food and water to feed and sustain the world if we start now to work on plans for the future that conserve these resources and address overpopulation. We don't need The World Bank to continue to scaremonger about this for profit. We don't need Monsantos to take advantage of us for profit. We need a plan that actually educates people about conservation and effective irrigation and infrastructure, and we need to give farming back to the farmers and water back to the people.
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- JanforGore
- 2 months ago
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Papa Bush already signed Executive Order 12803 allowing our infrastructure to be leveraged for loans. This opened up our infrastructure to foreign ownership. Papa Bush sold us out.
Foreign corporations now own our waterways and bridges. They will eventually begin to cash in on their deeds. -
You're always posting the most pertinent stories Jan. Thank you.
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"causes of water scarcity are much the same as those of the food crisis: demand exceeds a finite supply. "
So -- raise prices.
"stopping the commoditization and corporatization of water that keeps it from being used by the people as the human right it is. "
this POV is a mistake bc it implies that water should be free (you go on to talk about prices...). If water is "free", demand will exceed supply (as noted above) and shortages will occur. The poor will suffer first/worst because they have little power.
You may enjoy my solution, which protects the poor AND reduces demand -- no crisis.
http://aguanomics.com/2008/07/water-shortage-myth.html
btw -- both private and public water managers can waste water -- or deliver it responsibly. It's a question of community oversight. -
David Zetland:
I Read your article on water waste @ Forbes. GREAT article. I wholeheartedly agree with you. People don't feel a sense of urgency, so they continue to waste it all away.
I think wars will be fought over water in the not-so-distant future at the rate we're wasting it.
In addition to the price increase, one simple, immediate solution would be to get rid of all grass lawns. Instead, in regions like Southern California (where I'm from and where you refer to in the article) we should DO AWAY with grass lawns and instead have native plants (cactus etc) that demand very little to no water at all. Plus these plants look better in my opinion anyway...
A perfect example of how spot on your article is, is the gas price increase.
People are paying double what they paid a short time ago (and more) and are USING LESS!!!
The same probably goes for anything really. Make it cost what it's really worth, and people will treat it (whatever "it" is) with respect.
I'm personally GLAD to pay more if it means people wake up and start using less, and I'm by no means rich by any stretch of the imagination. I work full time and am a full time student, school's not cheap...
Thank you for the article.
PEACE -
Hey onechance,
Glad you liked it. If water gets expensive, the lawns will be the first to go, voluntarily, like SUVs. :)
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