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Half of the streams, lakes and estuaries assessed were not clean enough to
support fishing and swimming. So forget about drinking it!
Water: Why Care?
must admit I get a lot of blank stares when I start talking about water
conservation and rainwater harvesting. Not among the folks who already do it,
but from those who don't. The typical response is "Why should I care? Water is
cheap, and all I have to do is turn on the tap and it flows." While it's true
that water does flow easily, it is even truer that we have not yet had to pay
the true cost for this precious resource.
Plentiful, good-quality and easy-to-access (i.e., cheap) water is becoming a
thing of the past. Quality is no longer a given when you turn on the tap.
Water-quality problems
— storm-runoff contamination, upstream pollution and city drinking water supplies
not passing current Environmental Protection Agency drinking water standards
— are now being reported on a monthly basis around North America and are a daily
occurrence around the world.
I remember when gas cost 25 cents a gallon. My sister would pull into the gas
station and hand the attendant a couple of quarters for a couple of gallons or,
on a rare occasion, a couple of dollars to fill up the tank. It's hard to
believe, but this was just a few decades ago. Just as demand and the need for
additional processing has driven up the price of gas, demand from population
growth and the requirement to add newer filtration systems to create safe
drinking water are driving up the price of water. And just as there have been
shortages of gasoline, so will there be with water.
Water is not a God-given right. It is a resource, and one that should be
cautiously and respectfully treated. If you doubt this, look at recent
headlines, such as "India running out of water," "Thirsty China turns to the
sea," "Water poses the biggest limit on growth in California," "Arizona towns
urged to balance growth," and "Growth stirs a battle to draw more water from
the Great Lakes."
Water from the tap used to taste good and be good for you. No one had water
filters, and the whole concept of buying bottled water in a store would have
been a joke. No more
— water filtration is a $2.6 billion industry, with already one in four homes in
the United States now having a unit. Bottled water is now over a $50 billion
industry worldwide and growing rapidly.
Currently, about 20 percent of Earth's 6 billion people lack access to safe
drinking water. By 2020, over 60 percent of the world's population is expected
to lack access to clean water if current population growth trends continue
without a significant increase in spending to address the problem.
According to U.N. statistics, more than 200 million people every year suffer
from water-related diseases and about 2.2 million of them
— mostly the poor — die.
But don't be fooled into thinking that this is a problem just for poor Third
World countries. Water quality is also an increasing problem in the United
States.
Since the 1970s, most rivers have experienced water-quality problems. Despite
the successes of the Clean Water Act and the Safe Drinking Water Act, river
waters in the United States continue to deteriorate. The
National Water Quality Inventory: 2000 Report stated that half of the streams, lakes and estuaries assessed were not clean
enough to support fishing and swimming. So forget about drinking it!
Municipal water, including ours in the Santa Fe area, is usually sourced from
such rivers, as well as from wells and water reservoirs. Levels of contaminants
in most wells and rivers are steadily increasing as pollutants are regularly
dumped and pumped into them by upstream communities. Older wastewater plants
are not equipped to take out the new, complex chemicals or pharmaceutical drugs
that make it into the water. These new creations are mostly passed through the
existing filtration systems, diluted and consumed downstream.
As the quality of safe drinking water decreases, the price increases. Water
utility companies are raising
their prices at an increasing rate. Here are few headlines from around the
country in the past 12 months: "Denmark City to increase water and sewer rates
by 25%," "CA water rates up 20% since 2003," "Detroit water rates increase,"
and "Rates up 9% and 26% respectively in Pennsylvania area." Locally, similar
levels of rate increases are being introduced in both the Santa Fe and Eldorado
areas.
This level of price increases is a very recent, but likely to be continuing,
trend. They are being driven in part by population growth, but also by new
infrastructure needs (i.e., newer filtration equipment). A majority of today's
water infrastructure was bought and paid for by previous generations, according
to the American Water Works Association. Most living Americans did not pay for
the system that is in use today. It has always been there and just worked. But
pipes leak, pumps wear out and break, and yesterday's filtration equipment
cannot handle current needs.
In order for all of us to have clean water, prices will likely continue to
climb. We may be surprised at what we will resort to and how much we will pay
in the future to guarantee access to clean, plentiful water. There are legal
battles already ongoing in both the western and southern United States for
access to water supplies
, and here in New Mexico there are several ongoing suits over our diminishing
water availability.
As former president Lyndon B. Johnson once said, "A nation that fails to plan
intelligently for the development and protection of its precious waters will be
condemned to wither because of its shortsightedness." The quantity, quality and
cost of water are crucial issues to which to pay attention. Below are a few
simple and easy things you can do to help make a difference:
1. Start by being aware of your water. Do you really know anything about this precious resource and where it comes
from to get to your tap? Call your local water company and get their Water
Quality Report. In Santa Fe, they can be reached at (505) 955-4225.
2. Conserve. It is not too late to start conserving this life-giving resource. Find out 100
different ways to conserve at www.harvesth2o.com/BeforeHarvest.shtml.
3. Harvest and use rainwater wisely. Get a rain barrel and get a rebate in Santa Fe. Get more information at
www.santafenm.gov/waterwise.
4. Lastly, get involved. Join one of the many local water conservation groups, such as Earth Works
Institute, www.earthworksinstitute.org.
Please help conserve our most precious resource. The solution starts with each
of us doing what we can.
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