मंगलवार, 1 जुलाई 2008

Bottled water debate hits a boiling point


A debate over water is boiling over in the United States and elsewhere amid growing environmental concerns about bottled water and questions about safety of tap water.

The US Conference of Mayors in June passed a resolution calling for a phasing out of bottled water by municipalities and promotion of the importance of public water supplies.

While largely symbolic, the vote highlighted a growing movement opposing regular use of bottled water because of its plastic waste and energy costs to transport drinking supplies.

Janet Larsen, director of research at the Earth Policy Institute, cites a "backlash against bottled water as more people are realizing what they get out of the bottles is not any better than what they get out of the faucet."

The Pacific Institute, a California think thank on sustainability issues, contends that producing bottles for US water consumption required the equivalent of more than 17 million barrels of oil in 2006, not including the energy for transportation.

The group says bottling water for Americans produces more than 2.5 million tons of carbon dioxide and consumes three liters of water for each liter of bottled water produced.

The debate in the US mirrors that taking place worldwide in places such as Paris; Liverpool, England; Florence, Italy; Vancouver, Canada. According to the EPI, the issue making waves among policymakers in locations including Denmark and New South Wales, Australia, among others.

The backlash comes even amid surging sales of bottled water in the United States. Some of this is linked to concerns about contamination of public water supplies, although critics of the industry say marketing hype is a greater factor.

Aficionados of Evian from France or Fiji from the South Pacific swear by the taste and health benefits of those waters, but others decry the high cost of energy for a product that may not be any better than local water.

A Natural Resources Defense Council concluded that "most of the tested waters were found to be of high quality (but) some brands were contaminated."

The group said bottled waters "are subject to less rigorous testing and purity standards than those which apply to city tap water."

In fact, says the group "about one-fourth of bottled water is actually bottled tap water" while government rules "allow bottlers to call their product 'spring water' even though it may be brought to the surface using a pumped well, and it may be treated with chemicals."

Americans drank about 8.8 billion gallons (33 billion liters) of packaged water in 2007, or 15 percent of their total liquid intake, according to the Beverage Marketing Corp. Per capita bottled US water consumption is up to 29 gallons (109 liters) per year, from 20 gallons in 2002.

The US is the largest consumer of bottled water, but on a per capita basis it ranks far behind Italy, the leader which consumes nearly twice as much, and others such as the United Arab Emirates, Mexico and France.

Advocates of bottled water they the industry is being used as a scapegoat.

Kevin Keane of the American Beverage Association said the mayors' resolution was "just cynical politics. It's like being against rope until you need a lifeline."

Keane says the bottled water industry is needed for communities hit by floods or other natural disasters and compromised municipal water systems.

Bottled water "is convenient and a good tasting beverage, especially in this day when you have fewer water fountains and even when you have them, people are skeptical about using them."

Beyond questions of safety and environment, some activists say the bottled water industry is seizing a public resource.

In the northeast state of Maine, a battle is brewing over access to a large aquifer by Poland Spring, a large US bottler owned by Swiss-based Nestle.

"Nestle's water grab is ruining streams, ponds, wells and aquifers," said Judy Grant of the activist group Corporate Accountability.

"Nestle's practices are raising serious questions about who should be allowed to control water, our most essential resource, and to what end."

The mayors, meeting in Miami, approved a resolution proposed by San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom along with 17 other large-city mayors to redirect taxpayer dollars from bottled water to other city services.

Joe Doss, president and chief executive of the International Bottled Water Association, an industry group based near Washington, said it was "unfortunate this is turning into a tap water versus bottled water debate."

Doss said most people drink both and that in many cases bottled water is a healthy replacement for sweetened or carbonated drinks.

The IBWA says the industry uses less than one percent of groundwater supplies and produces only a tiny fraction of greenhouse gases.

According to Doss, water bottles represent a tiny fraction of plastic waste that even if not recycled, and that any effort to improve recycling should cover all industries, not just bottled water.

http://afp.google.com

CALL FOR PEOPLES SAARC 2008: JULY 18TH TO 20TH - COLOMBO!

South Asian heads of government will meet in Colombo, Sri Lanka for the annual South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) summit between 27 July and 3 August 2008. Regrettably, this SAARC summit will be no different to its predecessors in having little relevance to the needs and daily struggles of the peoples of South Asia. Its agenda will be shaped by the policy choices of post-colonial elites, while it has spectacularly failed to achieve regional unity or even facilitate grassroots initiatives in that direction.

Therefore, since 1993, social movements and peoples' organisations have also converged in parallel to the SAARC summit to raise our agenda for our region, to demonstrate our will for friendship, solidarity and visa-free movement of people across imposed boundaries, and to manifest our desire for a peoples union of South Asia.

On 18, 19 and 20 July 2008, hundreds of women, workers, peasants, artisans, urban and rural poor, students and youth, cultural activists, scholar activists, and representatives of marginalised and excluded social groups and communities from around South Asia will gather at Peoples SAARC 2008 in Colombo, Sri Lanka.

The main theme of Peoples SAARC 2008 is "Towards A Peoples Union of South Asia" while the sub-themes include women's rights; demilitarisation, denuclearisation and democracy; right to food, livelihood, health, education and social security in the context of alternatives to
neo-liberalism; environmental justice and natural resource rights; and South Asian solidarity with anti-imperialist struggles worldwide. A mass rally for peace and justice in South Asia will form part of the closing ceremony.

We call upon all those who affirm the vision of a peoples union of South Asia to join country-level preparations, mobilise for, and participate in Peoples SAARC 2008 in Colombo on 18, 19 and 20 July 2008.

For further information contact:
Secretariat, Peoples SAARC 2008,
19/1/1, Siri Dhamma Mawatha,
Colombo 10,
Sri Lanka
or
Email: peoplesaarcsl@gmail.com
or
Tel: +94 11 - 267 2586.

Working Together Can Forge A Path


Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, left, meets Yasuo Fukuda, Prime Minister of Japan, in Kyoto. June 30, 2008. (Photo by Eskinder Debebe courtesy UN)
The secretary-general arrived in Japan on Saturday, kicking off a two-week, three-nation official visit to East Asia which will culminate with his participation at the annual summit of the Group of Eight, G8, industrialized countries in Hokkaido early next month.
The world must galvanize its will and reach a new agreement on measures to fight climate change by the end of 2009, said UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon Sunday in the Japanese city where the Kyoto Protocol was finalized.
Ban said he chose Kyoto as his first stop because he wants to "send out a very symbolic political message from the place where the Kyoto Protocol was adopted more than 10 years ago."

"We have resources; we have technologies. I think what is missing is largely political will. If we have united political will, I am sure we will be able to overcome these crises," the secretary-general said.

Ban said the 1997 protocol was a historic and crucial first step by the international community to curb greenhouse gas emissions. With the first commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol ending in 2012, the secretary-general stressed that a new agreement must be adopted by December 2009, a target date already agreed by governments at the UN climate summit in Bali, Indonesia last December.

"Last year, we witnessed how working together can help us forge a path to collective action in the face of seemingly insurmountable challenges," Ban told an audience of students, scholars and representatives of the private sector and civil society at Kyoto University.

He said climate change is too big and complex a challenge for any country or sector of society to address alone; each country and each sector can and must contribute.

"The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, known as IPCC, provided the science; the Stern Report, the economics; the UN High-Level Event on Climate Change, the political leadership; Al Gore's Inconvenient Truth, the public awareness. Taken together, all these contributed to rising momentum and achieving a significant breakthrough in the global response," he said.

"This came in the Bali Roadmap agreed last December, which launched a new negotiations process to design a comprehensive post-2012 framework,"
said Ban.

The secretary-general called on all major emitters to set ambitious targets which he said were essential to conclude the deal in 2009.
He commended Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda of Japan "for the impressive vision he recently announced for moving Japan to a low-carbon society - including Japan's plan to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 60 to 80 percent by 2050."
On June 9, Prime Minister Fukuda said in a speech at the Japan Press Club, "We must greatly shift the country's helm towards a low-carbon society for the sake of future generations."

"For this we must halve global CO2 emissions by the year 2050. This reduction target forms the crux of the 'Cool Earth Programme' which Japan has proposed to the world. I aim to have this goal shared by the G8 and other major economies," the prime minister said.

Commenting on this announcement, Ban said, "This is the kind of leadership by example we need from developed countries to fulfil the larger share of responsibility they bear."

The secretary-general said he would count on Japan's leadership at the G-8 summit to come up with concrete measures to address three pressing, interrelated challenges - the global food crisis, climate change, and the race to reach global anti-poverty targets called the Millennium Development Goals by the deadline of 2015.

Climate change was the focus when Ban met Japanese business leaders in Tokyo later in the day. Speaking to about 30 senior executives of leading Japanese corporations, the secretary-general said support and cooperation of the private sector is vitally important to addressing pressing issues such as climate change.

"The race is under way to develop and provide needed solutions, such as clean technology, renewable energy, efficient products and processes, and sustainable goods and services," he said. "I have no doubt that the Japanese companies will play a leadership role in this new era of responsible and sustainable business."

Ban said he was excited by his first visit to Japan as secretary-general. "Japan's leadership cannot be more important than today as it is assuming the presidency of the G8," he said.

On Monday, he had an audience with the Emperor and Empress of Japan, and held meetings with Crown Prince Naruhito, Prime Minister Fukuda and Foreign Minister Masahiko Koumura.

http://www.ens-newswire.com

Revival Of Traditional Stonespouts

....capacity-building programmes in community level to empower the local people in conserving the traditional stonespouts and managing their local source of water. Similarly, the project will operate informative programme on quality test of drinking water and household methods of water purification
UN-HABITAT Water for Asian Cities Programme, Lalitpur Sub-metropolitan City (LSMC) and Center for Integrated Urban Development has launched a project to build the capacity of local people for the conservation of traditional stonespouts and establishment of community based water management system. The project has been entitled ‘Capacity Building of Local people in conserving Traditional Stone Spouts of Lalitpur Sub-metropolitan City’.

The piped water provided by Kathmandu Upatyaka Khanepani Limited (KUKL) in Lalitpur is not enough to meet the actual water demand. The stonespouts in Lalitpur produce about 1.8 million litres of water during the dry season and 5 million litres during the rainy season.

“Realizing the fact that drinking water problem faced by the Lalitpur locals can be mitigated by conserving and utilising water from traditional stonespouts, we have launched the project,” said Dr. Roshan Raj Shrestha, chief technical advisor of UN-HABITAT. Executive Officer of Lalitpur Sub-metropolitan City Krishna Prasad Devkota said that it will be more effective if KUKL initiate to utilize the local water sources coordinating with the community in the present context when KUKL has not been able to supply adequate drinking water in Lalitpur.

Stressing on recharging the ground aquifer, Dr. Roshan Raj Shrestha told that it is equally necessary to utilize and conserve local water sources. Executive Director of CIUD Padma Sunder Joshi informed that the project will distribute water in the community level by managing water of Amrit Hiti, Tapa Hiti and Sundhara. The project has selected three traditional stonespouts to manage drinking water in community level based on the study conducted by UN-HABITAT to conserve traditional stonespouts and water sources in Lalitpur. The project has mainly focused on establishment of community based water management system associated with three selected traditional stonespouts in partnership with local users and the municipality.
The project will operate capacity-building programmes in community level to empower the local people in conserving the traditional stonespouts and managing their local source of water. Similarly, the project will operate informative programme on quality test of drinking water and household methods of water purification.
The total cost of the project is US$ 1,42,000 and UN-HABITAT has contributed US$ 90,000 in the project. The local consumers, CIUD, LSMC will bear the remaining amount of the project that will cover a period of 18 months from May 2008 to October 2009.

Source: Gorkhapatra
http://www.ngoforum.net