Water is our most essential resource for life, the economy, and has no substitute. However, water demand is increasing with population growth while supply remains fixed. As water becomes scarcer, political conflicts are likely to emerge. Currently, many people live without access to clean water and infrastructure in the US and elsewhere is failing. Climate change will exacerbate water challenges. By 2050, half the world's population may face water stress. Solutions include conservation, reuse, technology advances, and better management of water as a valued resource rather than a right. Water prices will need to rise to reflect its true cost and value to shape sustainable use.
The recent drought has prompted Governor Brown to enact mandatory water restrictions for the first time in the history of the state of California. With no end to the drought in sight and the level of the state’s reservoirs being at their lowest levels in decades everyone will need to take steps to conserve this precious resource. Grey Water systems have recently been proposed as a method where home owners can help conserve water by using reclaimed water produced by laundry, sinks and bathtubs in non-potable applications such as irrigation or flushing toilets
The document discusses the environmental concerns associated with the increased consumption of bottled water. It notes that sales of bottled water have quadrupled in the last 20 years and grew almost 8% in just one year. While bottled water companies argue it provides a healthy alternative to soda, critics point out the environmental costs of the oil used to produce plastic bottles and ship them worldwide. The large quantity of plastic water bottles ending up in landfills is also a concern, despite efforts to increase recycling. The article advocates drinking tap water instead of bottled water when quality is not an issue, to reduce unnecessary environmental impacts and costs.
Author of “The Future of Water” and a long-time strategic consultant and transactional advisor to the water industry, Maxwell will review current challenges and opportunities in the world water market, and will highlight four critical trends which will increasingly categorize the water business and water decision-making over the longer-term future.
The document is the 2002 annual report for the South Central Connecticut Regional Water Authority. It discusses the Authority's mission to provide a safe and affordable water supply while preserving open spaces. It highlights several projects from the past year, including rebuilding the Lake Whitney Water Treatment Plant, purchasing land to protect watersheds, and supporting community initiatives after 9/11. The report expresses confidence in the Authority's role as a regional leader while acknowledging the new security challenges faced since 9/11.
Plastic water bottles have significant negative environmental impacts as 80% are not recycled and can take up to 1000 years to decompose. Americans use over 4 million plastic bottles per hour, contributing to the 46,000 pieces of plastic debris found in every square mile of ocean. Bottled water production requires significant resources like oil and generates greenhouse gas emissions equivalent to millions of cars or transatlantic flights. Tap water is more strictly regulated and tested than bottled water and has a much smaller environmental footprint. Choosing tap water over bottled water can help reduce one's water footprint and plastic waste.
This document summarizes the South Central Connecticut Regional Water Authority's efforts to provide high quality water to customers in a reliable, sustainable and cost effective manner. It discusses initiatives to acquire watershed land, invest in infrastructure projects, educate the public on water quality issues, and support the local community through donations of bottled water. The Authority aims to build strong customer relationships and ensure access to water as a valuable resource.
Water can be public or private. Public water comes from municipal sources and makes up the majority of water usage. Private water is bottled and sold for profit by major corporations. Most bottled water comes from public sources like taps and is bottled and marketed as safer than tap water. However, bottled water poses environmental risks from plastic waste and may leach chemicals from plastic bottles with prolonged storage. The safety of both public and private water sources depends on location and quality of testing and treatment.
Water is our most essential resource for life, the economy, and has no substitute. However, water demand is increasing with population growth while supply remains fixed. As water becomes scarcer, political conflicts are likely to emerge. Currently, many people live without access to clean water and infrastructure in the US and elsewhere is failing. Climate change will exacerbate water challenges. By 2050, half the world's population may face water stress. Solutions include conservation, reuse, technology advances, and better management of water as a valued resource rather than a right. Water prices will need to rise to reflect its true cost and value to shape sustainable use.
The recent drought has prompted Governor Brown to enact mandatory water restrictions for the first time in the history of the state of California. With no end to the drought in sight and the level of the state’s reservoirs being at their lowest levels in decades everyone will need to take steps to conserve this precious resource. Grey Water systems have recently been proposed as a method where home owners can help conserve water by using reclaimed water produced by laundry, sinks and bathtubs in non-potable applications such as irrigation or flushing toilets
The document discusses the environmental concerns associated with the increased consumption of bottled water. It notes that sales of bottled water have quadrupled in the last 20 years and grew almost 8% in just one year. While bottled water companies argue it provides a healthy alternative to soda, critics point out the environmental costs of the oil used to produce plastic bottles and ship them worldwide. The large quantity of plastic water bottles ending up in landfills is also a concern, despite efforts to increase recycling. The article advocates drinking tap water instead of bottled water when quality is not an issue, to reduce unnecessary environmental impacts and costs.
Author of “The Future of Water” and a long-time strategic consultant and transactional advisor to the water industry, Maxwell will review current challenges and opportunities in the world water market, and will highlight four critical trends which will increasingly categorize the water business and water decision-making over the longer-term future.
The document is the 2002 annual report for the South Central Connecticut Regional Water Authority. It discusses the Authority's mission to provide a safe and affordable water supply while preserving open spaces. It highlights several projects from the past year, including rebuilding the Lake Whitney Water Treatment Plant, purchasing land to protect watersheds, and supporting community initiatives after 9/11. The report expresses confidence in the Authority's role as a regional leader while acknowledging the new security challenges faced since 9/11.
Plastic water bottles have significant negative environmental impacts as 80% are not recycled and can take up to 1000 years to decompose. Americans use over 4 million plastic bottles per hour, contributing to the 46,000 pieces of plastic debris found in every square mile of ocean. Bottled water production requires significant resources like oil and generates greenhouse gas emissions equivalent to millions of cars or transatlantic flights. Tap water is more strictly regulated and tested than bottled water and has a much smaller environmental footprint. Choosing tap water over bottled water can help reduce one's water footprint and plastic waste.
This document summarizes the South Central Connecticut Regional Water Authority's efforts to provide high quality water to customers in a reliable, sustainable and cost effective manner. It discusses initiatives to acquire watershed land, invest in infrastructure projects, educate the public on water quality issues, and support the local community through donations of bottled water. The Authority aims to build strong customer relationships and ensure access to water as a valuable resource.
Water can be public or private. Public water comes from municipal sources and makes up the majority of water usage. Private water is bottled and sold for profit by major corporations. Most bottled water comes from public sources like taps and is bottled and marketed as safer than tap water. However, bottled water poses environmental risks from plastic waste and may leach chemicals from plastic bottles with prolonged storage. The safety of both public and private water sources depends on location and quality of testing and treatment.
This document discusses India's water crisis and its impact on women. It notes that women bear the primary burden of fetching water as they are often responsible for providing water for their households. The document outlines water crises across several Indian states and notes that in many rural areas, women have to walk long distances such as 2.5 km to collect water, taking time away from other responsibilities and costing the national economy billions per year. The water crisis is worsening due to factors like rising population, industrial pollution, river diversions and proposed privatization of water systems.
The document discusses fresh water scarcity as world population and demand for water doubles every 20-40 years. It notes that demand for fresh water will exceed supply by 150% globally by 2025. The document then focuses on India, where groundwater is overexploited and 70-80% of children die from water-related illnesses each day. It outlines potential solutions for India like protecting water sources, harvesting rainwater, and investing in new desalination and water technologies.
This proposal suggests a tax credit for Utah residents who convert their water-intensive lawns into water-wise landscapes. Utah faces increasing water demands from its growing population, but receives little annual precipitation. Most residents use over half their water outside on lawns. The tax credit would cover costs of installing water collection, graywater, or other conservation systems. This would incentivize individuals to reduce water use, helping ensure sufficient long-term water supply as the population doubles by 2050. Estimates show residents could save over 29,000 gallons and $350 annually through such conversions.
Bottled water companies have aggressively marketed bottled water as safer and purer than tap water, despite tap water having more rigorous testing standards. Producing billions of bottled water bottles each year requires vast resources and contributes significantly to pollution and plastic waste. Most water bottles are not recycled and end up polluting the environment for thousands of years. Reliance on bottled water undermines access to clean water as a basic human right and diverts funding away from improving water infrastructure. Individual actions like using reusable water bottles can reduce waste and support access to clean water for all.
Check out this presentation that explains "Do we really need bottled water?" What if I told you that bottled water cost more than twice the price of the gas that you put in your car. How about 1500 bottles going into the trash every second of the day. All this and more in this presentation.
Desalination is an increasingly important process for obtaining fresh water by removing salt from seawater or salty water. Reverse osmosis is now the most widely used desalination technology, using membranes to filter out salt at high pressure. Significant technological advancements have improved the efficiency and reduced the costs of reverse osmosis desalination, including higher productivity membrane elements, more efficient pumps, and energy recovery devices. However, desalination plants still face challenges from high costs and potential environmental impacts. Further research aims to advance membrane and energy technologies to make desalination more sustainable and cost-effective.
Smart2o researches water solutions and provides customized systems to purify water for homes and offices. They advocate for health, savings, and the environment. Bottled water poses risks from chemicals in plastic and from potential contaminants, while most tap water meets regulations. Smart2o water systems offer purified water that is healthier, cheaper, and more eco-friendly than bottled water alternatives.
Z nanoshortdeck znano is option 3 distributed treated water 03ru55e11
This document proposes rebates to promote water efficient technologies and retrofits as Option #3 to address California's water crisis. Option #3 involves providing rebates for small distributed water treatment appliances from zNano that can produce water for $4.50 per gallon per day, far less than the cost of traditional large infrastructure options like desalination plants. The document argues that a rebate program could finance the installation of zNano appliances for thousands of homes at a much lower total and per gallon cost than alternative large infrastructure projects.
The water and wastewater infrastructure in the United States faces serious challenges and is in need of significant investment and innovation. Current systems are outdated, inefficient, and fail to utilize resources like water and energy. This presents opportunities for more sustainable solutions that optimize water usage, reduce costs, and generate value from waste products. New decentralized and natural treatment approaches are gaining ground and have the potential to transform the industry. The addressable market for sustainable water solutions in the US is estimated to grow from $4 billion currently to over $15 billion by 2020.
The Water Authority's viewpoint on a Bay-Delta fix, costs associated, and how MWD's commitments to the funding of such a fix may affect the San Diego region.
Portable Solar Powered RO Purifiers_Aquality water solutions_Indovation 2015_...India Water Portal
Mobile Solar Powered RO Purifiers: An innovative integration of technology to come up with a very economical, practical and sustainable solution for water purification in remote areas and emergency applications
Well - Environmental care for your well-beingKostja Klabjan
We aim to improve the quality of both the environment and our own well-being by providing innovative solutions that stop pollution from microplastics and waste water.
We seek to challenge mainstream thinking on economic, environmental and social issues to provide a purer way of life.
We believe that every single one of us has the potential to be part of the solution. We put the planet, and consequently, your well-being first.
The document discusses the dangers of drinking bottled water. It notes that plastic water bottles contain chemicals that can leach into the water when stored, including antimony which is linked to health issues in high amounts. Additionally, many plastic water bottles are not recycled and end up polluting the environment. The document recommends using water filters and reusable water bottles instead of disposable plastic bottles to avoid these health and environmental risks.
First portable nanofiltration drinking water purifierNimon Bondurant
CamelTrain™ is the world’s first all-membrane-based portable water purification system on the market. CamelTrain™ units produce up to 600 gph (2,271lph) of microbiologically clean water, all from a unit about the size of a piece of luggage. Additionally, they can stack and connect with the CamelTrain™ “P” to produce near reverse osmosis quality water
This document summarizes key facts about the global water crisis:
- Over 1 billion people worldwide do not have access to safe drinking water.
- Developing countries often dump untreated industrial waste into water sources, polluting drinking water.
- Lack of access to clean water and sanitation causes more deaths annually than from wars.
- While clean water costs just $2/person/year, a small number of corporations have made water a $400 billion industry.
1) The document presents arguments against bottled water, noting that corporations spend millions marketing bottled water as superior to tap water to drive profits.
2) It argues that water should not be treated as a commodity and that corporations manufacture demand through marketing and scare tactics to treat water as a commodity for profit.
3) The document discusses policies like Colorado's bottle bill that increased recycling and funding for schools by placing deposits on bottles.
The document discusses the challenges facing UK water management, including increasing demand, decreasing supply due to climate change, and public unawareness of the issues. It proposes a "20:20 Challenge" to reduce individual daily water usage by 20 litres and water lost through leakages by 20%, which could save enough water to meet 23% of the national need. The document outlines ways to achieve this through reducing domestic usage, improving leak detection technology, and encouraging water meter installation. It calls on all water industry professionals to get involved in meeting the 20:20 Challenge goals.
The Annual Meeting of the Oildale Mutual Water Company was held on October 1st, where the existing board members were all re-elected with strong support from customers. The board president expressed gratitude for the community support and said the board is dedicated to running a fiscally responsible company that provides a critical water supply. However, the company has objected to excessive spending like salaries and bonuses by their water wholesaler, North of the River Municipal Water District. The board president urged customers to help stop these excessive charges by voting for more fiscally responsible candidates in the November election.
Toward Water Sustainability: a blueprint for philanthropyJennifer Fox
Clean, reliable water is essential for every person, economy, and ecosystem. Around the world and here at home, our freshwater resources confront rising demands and mounting threats due to climate change, overuse, and pollution. This work by leaders of eight US Foundations and a small team provides a blueprint to advancing water solutions in the Western US.
This document summarizes a student research paper on how different advertising appeals affect bottled water purchase intentions. The paper aims to understand how contextual and intrapersonal factors influence purchase decisions. It reviews literature showing bottled water is perceived as higher quality than tap water due to branding and marketing emphasizing natural imagery. However, taste tests show consumers cannot distinguish between the two. The student proposes to study how advertisement appeals could encourage more environmentally friendly behavior by reducing bottled water consumption. The document provides background on bottled water's large carbon footprint and waste. It establishes a need to understand what motivates purchases and how messaging could change consumption patterns to address climate change.
Splash Water for Life develops and distributes atmospheric water harvester technologies to provide clean drinking water. They produce home/office units that generate up to 30 liters per day and commercial/industrial units that generate up to 11,356 liters daily. The company seeks $3-5 million in funding to expand globally targeting water organizations, governments, and private sector customers in need of water solutions. Their goal is to become the leading clean water technology provider and reach profitability within one year of their 2013 product rollout.
This document discusses the environmental impacts of bottled water usage versus tap water. It notes that over 1 billion people lack access to clean drinking water currently, and by 2025 two-thirds of the world's population may lack access due to factors like global warming. While bottled water is popular, it has significant environmental costs to produce and transport the plastic bottles. The document provides arguments for why tap water is generally safe to drink in most areas and offers 5 reasons for breaking the bottled water habit, such as the high costs and oil usage required for bottled water production. It encourages adopting reusable water bottles and simple filtration systems as more sustainable alternatives.
This document discusses India's water crisis and its impact on women. It notes that women bear the primary burden of fetching water as they are often responsible for providing water for their households. The document outlines water crises across several Indian states and notes that in many rural areas, women have to walk long distances such as 2.5 km to collect water, taking time away from other responsibilities and costing the national economy billions per year. The water crisis is worsening due to factors like rising population, industrial pollution, river diversions and proposed privatization of water systems.
The document discusses fresh water scarcity as world population and demand for water doubles every 20-40 years. It notes that demand for fresh water will exceed supply by 150% globally by 2025. The document then focuses on India, where groundwater is overexploited and 70-80% of children die from water-related illnesses each day. It outlines potential solutions for India like protecting water sources, harvesting rainwater, and investing in new desalination and water technologies.
This proposal suggests a tax credit for Utah residents who convert their water-intensive lawns into water-wise landscapes. Utah faces increasing water demands from its growing population, but receives little annual precipitation. Most residents use over half their water outside on lawns. The tax credit would cover costs of installing water collection, graywater, or other conservation systems. This would incentivize individuals to reduce water use, helping ensure sufficient long-term water supply as the population doubles by 2050. Estimates show residents could save over 29,000 gallons and $350 annually through such conversions.
Bottled water companies have aggressively marketed bottled water as safer and purer than tap water, despite tap water having more rigorous testing standards. Producing billions of bottled water bottles each year requires vast resources and contributes significantly to pollution and plastic waste. Most water bottles are not recycled and end up polluting the environment for thousands of years. Reliance on bottled water undermines access to clean water as a basic human right and diverts funding away from improving water infrastructure. Individual actions like using reusable water bottles can reduce waste and support access to clean water for all.
Check out this presentation that explains "Do we really need bottled water?" What if I told you that bottled water cost more than twice the price of the gas that you put in your car. How about 1500 bottles going into the trash every second of the day. All this and more in this presentation.
Desalination is an increasingly important process for obtaining fresh water by removing salt from seawater or salty water. Reverse osmosis is now the most widely used desalination technology, using membranes to filter out salt at high pressure. Significant technological advancements have improved the efficiency and reduced the costs of reverse osmosis desalination, including higher productivity membrane elements, more efficient pumps, and energy recovery devices. However, desalination plants still face challenges from high costs and potential environmental impacts. Further research aims to advance membrane and energy technologies to make desalination more sustainable and cost-effective.
Smart2o researches water solutions and provides customized systems to purify water for homes and offices. They advocate for health, savings, and the environment. Bottled water poses risks from chemicals in plastic and from potential contaminants, while most tap water meets regulations. Smart2o water systems offer purified water that is healthier, cheaper, and more eco-friendly than bottled water alternatives.
Z nanoshortdeck znano is option 3 distributed treated water 03ru55e11
This document proposes rebates to promote water efficient technologies and retrofits as Option #3 to address California's water crisis. Option #3 involves providing rebates for small distributed water treatment appliances from zNano that can produce water for $4.50 per gallon per day, far less than the cost of traditional large infrastructure options like desalination plants. The document argues that a rebate program could finance the installation of zNano appliances for thousands of homes at a much lower total and per gallon cost than alternative large infrastructure projects.
The water and wastewater infrastructure in the United States faces serious challenges and is in need of significant investment and innovation. Current systems are outdated, inefficient, and fail to utilize resources like water and energy. This presents opportunities for more sustainable solutions that optimize water usage, reduce costs, and generate value from waste products. New decentralized and natural treatment approaches are gaining ground and have the potential to transform the industry. The addressable market for sustainable water solutions in the US is estimated to grow from $4 billion currently to over $15 billion by 2020.
The Water Authority's viewpoint on a Bay-Delta fix, costs associated, and how MWD's commitments to the funding of such a fix may affect the San Diego region.
Portable Solar Powered RO Purifiers_Aquality water solutions_Indovation 2015_...India Water Portal
Mobile Solar Powered RO Purifiers: An innovative integration of technology to come up with a very economical, practical and sustainable solution for water purification in remote areas and emergency applications
Well - Environmental care for your well-beingKostja Klabjan
We aim to improve the quality of both the environment and our own well-being by providing innovative solutions that stop pollution from microplastics and waste water.
We seek to challenge mainstream thinking on economic, environmental and social issues to provide a purer way of life.
We believe that every single one of us has the potential to be part of the solution. We put the planet, and consequently, your well-being first.
The document discusses the dangers of drinking bottled water. It notes that plastic water bottles contain chemicals that can leach into the water when stored, including antimony which is linked to health issues in high amounts. Additionally, many plastic water bottles are not recycled and end up polluting the environment. The document recommends using water filters and reusable water bottles instead of disposable plastic bottles to avoid these health and environmental risks.
First portable nanofiltration drinking water purifierNimon Bondurant
CamelTrain™ is the world’s first all-membrane-based portable water purification system on the market. CamelTrain™ units produce up to 600 gph (2,271lph) of microbiologically clean water, all from a unit about the size of a piece of luggage. Additionally, they can stack and connect with the CamelTrain™ “P” to produce near reverse osmosis quality water
This document summarizes key facts about the global water crisis:
- Over 1 billion people worldwide do not have access to safe drinking water.
- Developing countries often dump untreated industrial waste into water sources, polluting drinking water.
- Lack of access to clean water and sanitation causes more deaths annually than from wars.
- While clean water costs just $2/person/year, a small number of corporations have made water a $400 billion industry.
1) The document presents arguments against bottled water, noting that corporations spend millions marketing bottled water as superior to tap water to drive profits.
2) It argues that water should not be treated as a commodity and that corporations manufacture demand through marketing and scare tactics to treat water as a commodity for profit.
3) The document discusses policies like Colorado's bottle bill that increased recycling and funding for schools by placing deposits on bottles.
The document discusses the challenges facing UK water management, including increasing demand, decreasing supply due to climate change, and public unawareness of the issues. It proposes a "20:20 Challenge" to reduce individual daily water usage by 20 litres and water lost through leakages by 20%, which could save enough water to meet 23% of the national need. The document outlines ways to achieve this through reducing domestic usage, improving leak detection technology, and encouraging water meter installation. It calls on all water industry professionals to get involved in meeting the 20:20 Challenge goals.
The Annual Meeting of the Oildale Mutual Water Company was held on October 1st, where the existing board members were all re-elected with strong support from customers. The board president expressed gratitude for the community support and said the board is dedicated to running a fiscally responsible company that provides a critical water supply. However, the company has objected to excessive spending like salaries and bonuses by their water wholesaler, North of the River Municipal Water District. The board president urged customers to help stop these excessive charges by voting for more fiscally responsible candidates in the November election.
Toward Water Sustainability: a blueprint for philanthropyJennifer Fox
Clean, reliable water is essential for every person, economy, and ecosystem. Around the world and here at home, our freshwater resources confront rising demands and mounting threats due to climate change, overuse, and pollution. This work by leaders of eight US Foundations and a small team provides a blueprint to advancing water solutions in the Western US.
This document summarizes a student research paper on how different advertising appeals affect bottled water purchase intentions. The paper aims to understand how contextual and intrapersonal factors influence purchase decisions. It reviews literature showing bottled water is perceived as higher quality than tap water due to branding and marketing emphasizing natural imagery. However, taste tests show consumers cannot distinguish between the two. The student proposes to study how advertisement appeals could encourage more environmentally friendly behavior by reducing bottled water consumption. The document provides background on bottled water's large carbon footprint and waste. It establishes a need to understand what motivates purchases and how messaging could change consumption patterns to address climate change.
Splash Water for Life develops and distributes atmospheric water harvester technologies to provide clean drinking water. They produce home/office units that generate up to 30 liters per day and commercial/industrial units that generate up to 11,356 liters daily. The company seeks $3-5 million in funding to expand globally targeting water organizations, governments, and private sector customers in need of water solutions. Their goal is to become the leading clean water technology provider and reach profitability within one year of their 2013 product rollout.
This document discusses the environmental impacts of bottled water usage versus tap water. It notes that over 1 billion people lack access to clean drinking water currently, and by 2025 two-thirds of the world's population may lack access due to factors like global warming. While bottled water is popular, it has significant environmental costs to produce and transport the plastic bottles. The document provides arguments for why tap water is generally safe to drink in most areas and offers 5 reasons for breaking the bottled water habit, such as the high costs and oil usage required for bottled water production. It encourages adopting reusable water bottles and simple filtration systems as more sustainable alternatives.
Business Plan for Production of Single Wall Steel Water Bottles Highly Profit...Ajjay Kumar Gupta
Business Plan for Production of Single Wall Steel Water Bottles Highly Profitable Investment Opportunities for Startup
Water is required not only to quench your thirst, but also to provide you with vital nutrients. Contaminants in water, on the other hand, may have a negative impact on your health. This is why you must pay attention not only to the water purification process but also to how you store water. Many of us have developed the habit of storing water in plastic bottles, which is harmful to our health.
For More Details:- https://niir.org/project-reports/projects/packaging-industry-beverage-can-bottles-blister-packs-carton-bags-plastic-bottles-skin-pack-tin-can-boxes-shrink-wrap-barrel-crate-aseptic-container-active-flexible-rigid-plastic-metal-flexible-glass-paper-board-food-beverage-projects/z,,62,0,a/index.html
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waterlocker Inc. is developing a system to provide safe drinking water to homes and businesses in Nova Scotia by installing water containment units that can store enough water for a family of four for 3-4 months. The company aims to address concerns about water safety and establish a more efficient drinking water management system. waterlocker units would eliminate health risks from contaminated water sources and costs of water treatment systems by providing monitored, abundant clean water with no waste. The business plan outlines production of units, a delivery service, locations of contractors and vehicles across Nova Scotia, with projections of $3.25 million profit from unit sales and $2.8 million from water delivery in the first year.
Waterlocker Inc. provides a drinking water distribution system to store and distribute potable water to residential and commercial buildings. The system includes water storage tanks, hoses, pipes and dispensers. A provisional patent has been filed for the system. The company aims to manufacture and install 13,000 water storage units in Nova Scotia in the first year, providing a safer alternative to bottled water and municipal supplies. The system has no similar competitors and eliminates health risks from contaminated water sources.
Grey water systems presentation 6 18-2015 finalTony Green
This document discusses greywater systems, which reuse household wastewater for irrigation. It begins with background on California's drought conditions and water sources. It then defines greywater, outlines its composition and benefits of reuse. Common greywater system types are described, including laundry-to-landscape systems that can be installed without a permit. Regulations vary by state. A case study demonstrates a simple system's installation and maintenance. The key takeaway is that greywater reuse is an achievable way for homeowners to conserve water.
EVS.pptx EUUUU maja ayega dkek dvdsvmkdvnkhneSmitNikumbh
Access to clean drinking water remains a global issue for millions. A novel solution involves extracting water from atmospheric moisture using condensation and purification processes. This approach could help address water scarcity by providing a sustainable source of clean drinking water in places with limited traditional sources. The Purify2Go system works by filtering air, condensing moisture, storing and filtering the collected water using components like air filters, condensers, tanks, pumps, and filters. It aims to empower communities facing water shortages with independent access to clean water.
NCBC Gulfport 2012 Consumer Confidence Report (CCR)CR United States Navy
The document is NCBC Gulfport's 2012 Consumer Confidence Report, which provides details about the source and quality of the base's drinking water. It finds the water safe to drink and meets all EPA standards. It notes some groups may be more vulnerable to contaminants and provides conservation tips. It also provides data on water source, treatment process, and results of water quality testing.
Biodegradable water bottle | Disadvantage of Plastic bottle| S&S Water |Proje...S&S Management Pvt. Ltd.
S&S management have designed a bottle which is completely biodegradable and sustainable
We have taken an initiative which is not only profitable for us but for the society and environment as well.
Here you can see the solution to one of the biggest problem in the world: reaching to clean, safe and potable water. Solar Water provides an unique solution to this problem. Please check our website: www.kare-engineering.fr for more information.
thank you
This document discusses water purification and scarcity issues in India. It proposes engaging consumers through a mobile activation center that demonstrates how water is polluted and promotes Voltas water purification solutions. The center would use interactive displays and games to educate visitors about water testing, RO filtration, and becoming a "Water Entrepreneur" operating a Water ATM. Participants could take a "Pledge of Purity" online or at the center to support installing more RO filters and Water ATMs in their communities.
Over 660 million people lack access to safe drinking water, resulting in over 840,000 deaths annually, especially among children. The water crisis disproportionately impacts developing nations and is considered the top global risk. Silent Crowd Drops aims to address this crisis by supplying water filters to communities in need, having already provided clean water access to 40,000 individuals across 15 countries. Their educational Drops program teaches students about the global water crisis and empowers them to fundraise and donate filters to impactful organizations to make a difference.
GreenBiz 16 Workshop Slides: "Closing the Loop to Advance a New Economy"GreenBiz Group
Slides for "Closing the Loop to Advance a New Economy". With the take-make-waste linear model no longer viable, companies are actively pursuing alternative models such as the circular economy, which has captured the imagination of the private sector as a viable approach for decoupling economic growth from resource constraints. The circular economy, an industrial model that is restorative or regenerative by design and intent, aims to keep products, components, and materials at their highest utility at all times, and represents an opportunity worth in excess of $1 trillion for the global economy. In this session, we will explore how companies can leverage circular economy principles and best practices to help eliminate waste throughout the value chain and improve the bottom line.
The document discusses the global challenges of water resource management. It notes that rapid population growth, increasing water demands, deteriorating water quality, and climate change are exacerbating a global water crisis. While there have been many international agreements regarding this crisis, little progress has been made in implementing solutions. Achieving targets for access to safe drinking water and sanitation by 2015 will require significant increases in funding from national governments, international donors, and private sector investment. Pricing water appropriately and utilizing public-private partnerships could help address the crisis by increasing investment while protecting access for poor communities.
Forget the environment -- you're in the public-health businessBrian Gongol
Wastewater treatment gets no respect in America, and the biggest problem is that we keep on treating it as a matter for the environment. It's not. The only thing that matters is public health.
The document discusses the growing problem of water pollution worldwide and proposes a multi-pronged solution. It suggests creating a fund to educate young professionals in developing countries about water treatment techniques. It also proposes establishing community water centers to oversee local sanitation projects and offering incentives for waste water treatment programs and good water management practices among communities and industries. The goal is to increase technical knowledge, encourage local initiatives, raise awareness from an early age, and incentivize sustainable practices to address water pollution issues.
Presented by IWMI's Claudia Sadoff, Director General, at the Workshop on Development Impact and SDGs: Irrigation, Water Resource Management & WASH at New Development Bank (NDB) Headquarters, in Shanghai, China, on 20 February, 2019.
Co-Chairs, Val J. Lowe, MD, and Cyrus A. Raji, MD, PhD, prepared useful Practice Aids pertaining to Alzheimer’s disease for this CME/AAPA activity titled “Alzheimer’s Disease Case Conference: Gearing Up for the Expanding Role of Neuroradiology in Diagnosis and Treatment.” For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aids, and complete CME/AAPA information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at https://bit.ly/3PvVY25. CME/AAPA credit will be available until June 28, 2025.
Know the difference between Endodontics and Orthodontics.Gokuldas Hospital
Your smile is beautiful.
Let’s be honest. Maintaining that beautiful smile is not an easy task. It is more than brushing and flossing. Sometimes, you might encounter dental issues that need special dental care. These issues can range anywhere from misalignment of the jaw to pain in the root of teeth.
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Nano-gold for Cancer Therapy chemistry investigatory projectSIVAVINAYAKPK
chemistry investigatory project
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Cancer remains one of the leading causes of death worldwide, prompting the need for innovative treatment methods. Nanotechnology offers promising new approaches, including the use of gold nanoparticles (nanogold) for targeted cancer therapy. Nanogold particles possess unique physical and chemical properties that make them suitable for drug delivery, imaging, and photothermal therapy.
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There is increasing confidence that cell therapies will soon play a role in the treatment of autoimmune disorders, but the extent of this impact remains to be seen. Early readouts on autologous CAR-Ts in lupus are encouraging, but manufacturing and cost limitations are likely to restrict access to highly refractory patients. Allogeneic CAR-Ts have the potential to broaden access to earlier lines of treatment due to their inherent cost benefits, however they will need to demonstrate comparable or improved efficacy to established modalities.
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Widespread adoption of cell therapies will not only require strong efficacy and safety data, but also adapted pricing and access strategies. At oncology-based price points, CAR-Ts are unlikely to achieve broad market access in autoimmune disorders, with eligible patient populations that are potentially orders of magnitude greater than the number of currently addressable cancer patients. Developers have made strides towards reducing cell therapy COGS while improving manufacturing efficiency, but payors will inevitably restrict access until more sustainable pricing is achieved.
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H2O Trust
1. Global 21st Century Filtered Mains Water
Street Vending Dispenser Project
Barcode Electronic Payment
Plastic Bottle Free Zone
2. Our Mission Statement
Introduction
Benefits of Street Vending Dispenser
Illustration of Drinking Water SVD
Electronic Payment Method
Global Employment Opportunities
Summary
Contact Details
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3. To independently monitor global Drinking Water quality via our newly
manufactured outdoor extra filtered Street Vending Dispensers.
Important health facts are withheld from the public about the safety of
domestic drinking water. For example that dangerous toxins and radioactive
pollutants are not being totally removed from our drinking water supplies.
Globally the $100 billion plastic bottle water/beverage industry; are not
legally required to disclose fully the damage caused by their oil based PET
production. Both from there manufacturing waste toxins & the long-term
landfill disposal problem. Customers are not informed that minute
quantities of cancer-forming bisphenol AF pollutants are present in their
highly marketed products. 90% of the cost of a plastic bottle of water is
spent on packaging & it’s transportation costs.
We aim to reduce plastic bottle use in the provision of drinking water ;
whilst providing high quality drinking water globally for all: visible to all.
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4. In 1989, our Street Vending Dispenser (SVD) Clean Drinking Water
project was first put down on paper.
Our original typed written business plan was prepared and sent to
numerous leaders (of the day) in Business and Politics.
To name a few:- PM Margaret Thatcher, Pres. Mikhail Gorbachev,
Pres. George Bush Snr., Pres. Bill Clinton, Pres. De Clerk,
Alex Salmond MP, V.Pres. Al Gore, Tony Benn MP, Michael Heseltine
MP, so many more; Sir Richard Branson, Lord Carrington, Lebanese
Embassy - London, PM Yitzhak Rabin (RIP), Tony Blair MP,
Princess Diana (RIP) & numerous Water related businesses CEO’s in
London i.e., Thames Water & the British Water Associations.
It is now 21 years later, 2010 to eternity.
This project has proved its importance and relevance in creating
health, equality & sustainability. Water = Life & security for All.
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5. This project has numerous benefits which are listed here:
Water availability reassurance & peace of mind
SVD designed to be functional & attractive to the global population
Removal of 100% of toxins & water contaminants
Reducing the disposal problem of plastic oil based PET bottles
Replacing redundant phone box locations due to Mobile phone increased
use; with a resource more vital to Life = Water
Holiday tourists guaranteed our SVD high quality chilled drinking water
output is safe for all their family members.
Independently monitoring drinking water purity & safety
Sustainable employment by our servicing technicians worldwide
Cashless drinking water purchase system using barcode Flasks
Enabling easier access to all; health & lives will be saved
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7. Customer safety is paramount therefore no cash will be inserted in our SVD’s;
ensuring less vandalism and crime.
We have designed an efficient, sustainable accounting method for all our global SVD
transactions. Opting for a data protected Electronic Payment System.
Five billion Stainless steel or Glass Drinking Water Flasks will be provided to each
adult for a nominally price & Free for the very poor.
Each flask will have it’s own barcode identical to an Electronic RFID chip/barcode
Water Purchase Card. Both items are required to purchase from all our Drinking
Water SVD’s for security & misuse purposes.
An introductory offer of 6 (six) free withdrawals using the new flask & WPC;
then minimal charges will begin to be incurred.
Each WPC can be topped-up in a manner similar to the current ‘pay-as-you-go’
‘mobile phone’ credit system.
Pricing in European & American countries will be equivalent to 30p/50 cents per
flask fill-up. Whilst in African & Asian countries a lower charge of 10p per flask fill-
up. Children between 8 -14 are limited to one Free daily use of the SVD.
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8. One of the most important benefits of the Street Vending Water
Dispenser is it’s sustainable job creation opportunities.
Pre-Installation stage:
a) Preparing the mains water inlet pipework. To be carried out by
municipal/council plumbing contractors.
b) Manufacturing the 10 million SVDs will increase various industries
output of components & employment growth.
Installation stage:
Requiring short-term employment for national /state trained fitting
engineers and testing teams.
Sustainable long-term Employment stage:
SVD Servicing Technicians for maintenance & filter replacements.
Universal Postal Union; ensuring our effective & secure global
Electronic SVD transactions & settlement data.
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9. More than one billion people in the world do not have access to safe clean
drinking water; that is 1/6th the current world’s population.
The human body is made up of 70% + water.; the blood is 80% +; the brain
75% +; and the liver an amazing 96% water.
Water is the body's only means of flushing out toxins, the key to disease
prevention.
USA/UK drinking water contains more than 2,100 toxic chemicals that can
cause Cancer. Many of the contaminants found in drinking water can be
traced back to improper or excessive use of ordinary compounds like lawn
chemicals, gasoline, dry-cleaning solvents and cleaning products.
Current Drinking water plants are old and lacking the new expensive
equipment required to remove the increasing concentrations of these
modern contaminants.
These trace levels of water-borne chemicals have been documented to have
adverse health effects on humans, especially on small children.
Our Global SVD Drinking Water project will monitor & ensure the highest
quality clean drinking water for ALL our 6 billion customers .
N.W.O. - New Water Ordered.
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