Posts Tagged ‘water’

Draining Lake Erie?

Monday, July 11th, 2011

Just thought I should pass this along to all our readers:

 

Dear Supporter,

Lake Erie does so much for us. It provides:

  • nearly 3 million Ohioans with drinking water
  • more than $10 billion in revenue each year from tourism and travel
  • recreational opportunities for tens of thousands of people
  • places to reconnect with friends and family
  • more than a quarter of a million jobs

While Lake Erie does so much for us, it needs our help.

Please take action now!

In 2008, the Great Lakes “Compact” became state and federal law. The Compact is an agreement between all the Great Lake states on how the water will be sustainably managed while prohibiting its diversion outside the Great Lakes Region.

State Senator Tim Grendell and Representative Lynn Wachtmann have introduced legislation (Senate Bill 170/House Bill 231) to implement parts of the Compact.

But these pieces of legislation do little to protect our precious resource AND they violate the Great Lakes Compact.

There is a way to prevent this from happening!

Representative Dennis Murray plans to introduce alternative, and more protective, legislation to fulfill the requirements in the Compact while protecting our water.

He is urgently seeking co-sponsorship of his bill. Please contact your state Representative and ask him or her to become an original co-sponsor of this legislation.

We need your support – and your representative – to protect our Lake Erie!

Sincerely,

 

 

Keith Dimoff
Executive Director

P.S. We know how committed you are to Ohio’s environment. Please make a $25 donation today to help the OEC continue our work to secure healthy air, land, and water for all who call Ohio home.

 

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Using waste heat to fill the bath: desalination in Abu Dhabi

Thursday, July 7th, 2011

A while back, my friend Jeff Hershberger sent me a link to a really interesting article.  Apparently, in Abu Dhabi, they have little water, but lots of heat.  Who would have guessed?  situated on the Persian Gulf, this country has plenty of fossil fuels, and therefore cash.  They have spent much of it developing cool architecture, and increasing energy efficiency.  Now they have figured out how to use heat loss in natural gas to desalinate sea water.  A cool applications for heat loss.  As the author states, one that we may soon see coming to America.  It would go a long way to meet the needs of California.  Check out this cool article here:

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What’s going on, on Lake Erie

Friday, May 20th, 2011

We are so luck to have such a wonderful natural resource so close to us.  The Great Lakes are one of the largest natural sources of fresh water in the world.  While so many countries have little or no access to fresh water, it amazes me how much we take this treasure for granted.  Even here at home, in the good old USA, we are limited in our access to fresh water.  We dam rivers to divert water to build orange groves and cities in the middle of the desert.  We have placed such a strain on our natural water supply, that the future for some states in in danger.  Nevada and California even got the shape of their state because territory was added to give access to the Colorado river.  Now we are drawing more water from this dammed river than nature can replenish, and reservoirs are being depleted.

So how do we celebrate the fantastic natural resource that we have and raise awareness about issues surrounding the Great Lakes?

One great event is the Edgewater Beach Clean Up.  The local water advocacy group Drink Local, Drink Tap meets monthly and walks the beach of Edgewater Park and collects garbage that washes up on shore.  They partner with other national organizations sometimes to help promote and extend their efforts.  The next one is coming up on June 4th and will feature free pancakes at the lower pavilion followed by a walk on the beach to clean up trash.  They provide the bags and gloves, you just have to pick up a little trash.  Contact Babette Oestreicher, DLDT Beach Cleanup Manager and RSVP if you can to help them plan the amount of supplies.  Otherwise, just show up.  Pancakes at 9 am, clean up from 10-12, the rest of your day to yourself and you can know that you helped out in this great effort.  Bring the kids and make a day of it!

Another event is the annual Lake Erie Boat Float.  This is their third year of having this event, and it is picking up steam.  They seem to be adding prize categories every year.  So here is the low down:

Plastic (and other) garbage is a big issue when it comes to waterways.  In order to raise awareness about plastics and their impact on the environment, an annual event is held at Edgewater Beach.  This year it is Saturday, September 10, 2011 at the Boat Launch at 10 am Lower Edgewater State Park Beach.  Sponsored by Cleveland Metroparks and Cleveland Museum of Natural History, this annual event features a race of boats made from recycled plastics.  There is no limit to the creativity, but the water crafts have to be made from post consumer materials.  Prizes are awarded for speed, style, best use of materials, and even a kid’s category.  It will be a lot of fun and you have plenty of time to start now and build a really great boat.  Winners get a trophy made from recycled plastic, bragging rights, and the joy of knowing their boat will be recycled by Poly-Flow.  Find all the details and registration forms here.

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World Water Day!

Tuesday, March 22nd, 2011

Today is World Water Day.  My buddy Erin Huber has put together a great program involving students, teachers, Cleveland, Uganda, and all of her friends.  My pals, Michele Kilroy and Nicole McGee were there helping out as well.  Part of the Drink Local, Drink Tap campaign, as well as her project Making Waves from Cleveland to Uganda, this was a great project and inspiring to see.  She tells it better than me, so read the flyer below.

Also, here are a few pics…

WE BELIEVE in Being the Change you wish to see in the world
Today is World Water Day. Please join us in spirit today to remember those without access to safe drinking water.
We will be sharing our silent moment TODAY with 150 inner-city youth in Cleveland, Ohio during a water reflection with Cleveland Councilman Joe Cimperman at Tower City Center.
Drink Local. Drink Tap. has connected these Cleveland youth to 700 (half orphaned) students in Uganda. We are MAKING WAVES remembering our water richness, while helping others in need.
Water is LIFE and connects EACH one of us.
Erin Huber, Chair
erinh@appliedphenom.org
……………………………………………………………………….
Just about 30 days LEFT for our PART 1 film funding campaign online:
Visit our new site!!
…and stay tuned! Part 2 of our documentary is already in the works!  Uganda July 2011 here we come! teaming up some local and global partners to make BIG WAVES in water!
………………………………………………………………………….

 


BIG NEWS-BIG PARTNERS:
Blue Planet Network’s Team Hope is RACING across America in June 2011 for St. Charles School in Uganda, Africa.
Learn more about our Making Waves from Cleveland to Uganda Project HERE

 

QUICK ANNOUNCEMENTS:
 

support however you can:
1. Share this message with 5 friends
2. make your drop in the bucket $big or small
3. Volunteer

$1,400 donated from CSu student groups for beach clean-ups in 2011, Thank you!

VISIT us at Tower City center in cleveland,oh March 24th-April 2nd

visit us at earthfest April 17th @ Cleveland Metroparks zoo

WEB LINKS:

 

Help connect youth from Cleveland to Uganda through water. This is who we are helping:
St. Charles School in Uganda
Make your 100% tax deductible donation today: 

Scan and donate directly from your smartphone!
Scan and donate directly from your QR Reader on your smartphone

For more information about us and our fiscal agent, please visit:
Sustainable Water 2019 Online 

or email:
Erin Huber at erinh@appliedphenom.org

Babette Oestreicher for Edgewater Beach Clean-up information and RSVP
babsearth@gmail.com

Staying Connected:

Find us on Facebook

Sustainable Water 2019: Drink Local. Drink Tap.

 

 

Who’s In the News…WE ARE!
Check out our article in EcoWatch

 

…and pick up your February CBC Magazine today to see SW2019 in the News!

 

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Water, water, everywhere?

Sunday, June 27th, 2010

Cool things are happening in the area of sustainability when it comes to water.  First off, we have the Sustainability Summit group that has been continuously working on great ideas and initiatives since the summit ended.  Here is an update from their group:

Sustainable Water 2019

Let’s reconnect with our lake!  This is the main focus of the group.  whether through more enviro-friendly recreation, kicked bottled water to the curb, or supporting green building and stormwater management in the region, this group has a PASSION for making our watershed sustainable.

Born out of the Sustainable Cleveland 2019 Summit in August of 2009, the Sustainable Water group has ramped up awareness about the dangers of bottled water and the importance of protecting our watersheds.

passionate members include representatives from Green City Blue Lake, The Cleveland Museum of Natural History, Earthday Coalition leaders, local business leaders, and entrepreneurs.

The group celebrated World Water Day March 22nd with a parade and band in the rain down Euclid Avenue, handed out 1000 steel water bottes with local tap water at Earthfest with ” Drink Local. Drink Tap.” sponsored by the Division of Water Pollution Control.

We plan to have tables at events throughout the summer and will be building a boat for the Lake Erie Boat Float Sept 11th.

6-21-10—The Sustainable Water 2019 group has an exciting announcement: It will be adopted as a project of the Institute of Applied Phenomenology in Science and Technology, a think tank of practitioners and academicians with interests in organizational development associated with “everydayness”.Erin Huber, the 2019 group co-lead, works at the Institute. The group’s Drink Local. Drink Tap. Campaign – highlighting the vast clean water resource of Lake Erie – will be the focus of a behavioral change study. The group meets every other Friday morning at the Westside market Cafe from 7:30-9am.

Next meeting is 6/25 at 7:30

and 7/9 from 9:15-10:45 (note the time change)

Pleaes email Erin Huber at integrity692000@yahoo.com for more information or to RSVP for a meeting.  All are welcome.

In the spirit of connecting to the lake, and in the spirit of raising awareness of recycling and waste issues, comes the announcement of  the dates for the next annual Lake Erie Boat Float.  This event was organized as a way to raise awareness of the use of plastics and to help increase recycling.  The Great Lakes are an important natural resource that we rely on for social and economic reasons.  We need to care for it, and other major water bodies around the globe.  I wrote about the plastics floating around the oceans, and Lake Erie could be a potential hot spot for this kind of pollution.  Registration is free and all you have to do is make your boat out of recyclable plastics.  The site even has tips and videos on how to make a plastic bottle boat.  Even if you don’t make a boat, be sure to come out for the fun!  Here is the info:

Saturday, September 11, 2010
Boat Launch @ 9 a.m.
Lower Edgewater State Park Beach
Cleveland, Ohio

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Mark your calendars…

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

BCN_FOBC_Mtg_March2010FINAL

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100 ways to save energy-Part 7

Friday, November 27th, 2009

This information is reprinted from a booklet called “100+ Ways To Improve Your Electric Bill.” These simple, low- or no-cost tips can assist you in making your energy decisions and in gaining greater control over your electric bill. By following these tips, you also will improve the comfort and convenience of your home. And you’ll help to protect the environment by using energy wisely. Compiled by the Edison Electric Institute 2008© Washington, D. C. www.eei.org

WATER HEATING

One of the biggest energy users in your home, next to heating and cooling systems, is your hot water system.

New federal efficiency standards for electric and gas water heaters took effect in January 2004. Make sure your new water heater meets or exceeds the new Energy Factor (EF) standard. (Examples: 0.90 EF for an electric 50-gallon unit, 0.59 EF for a gas 40-gallon unit.)

It is important to keep the system properly maintained. Once or twice a year, drain a bucket of water out of the bottom of the heater tank because it is sometimes full of sediment. The sediment insulates the water in the tank from the heating element, which wastes energy.

In addition, you might want to investi-gate a relatively inexpensive water heater insulation kit. Older hot water tanks (ex-cept super-insulated tanks) generally are not insulated very well, so an extra layer of protection will keep the heat from being lost through the walls of the tank. Be sure to read the instructions on the kit carefully. Do not insulate over any doors, vents, or relief valves.

When buying a water heater, it is wise to correctly estimate your needs. Don’t buy a water heater that is too large for your family, but you should consider your future needs as well as your present requirements.

Demands for hot water will be greater as the size of your household increases, as your children become older and begin to take showers or soak for hours in a full tub of water, and as certain new appliances (such as hot tubs or Jacuzzis) are added.

Some water heaters now have solid state controls (such as a “vacation” setting) that allow you to lower temperature settings. Look for and take advantage of these features.

In sprawling ranch houses or in resi-dences with two or three levels, the rooms requiring hot water may be widely separated. It may be possible to get better hot water service with less use of electric-ity by having two or more water heaters—one heater in each principal water-using area—instead of one heater in a
central location.

Repair leaky faucets promptly.
A steady drip of hot water can waste many gallons of water per month, plus the energy needed to heat the water.

Consult with a plumber to determine if your water heater meets the needs of your family.

Letting the water run while shaving or when washing dishes by hand is needless waste. Avoid this by using sink stoppers and dishpans.

Encourage family members to take showers rather than baths. The average person will use about half as much hot water in a shower as in a bath.

The standby heat loss of a water heater increases with temperature. So, set the temperature control of your water heater at a moderate 1200 F, or as low as possible without running out of hot water. If you need hotter water for certain functions, such as dishwashing, consider a dual-temperature system. Such sys-tems employ a central unit supplying 1200 F or lower temperature water for general purposes, plus a second, smaller water heater set for a higher temperature.

Locate water heaters as close to the points of hot water use as possible. The reason for this is that any hot water that remains in a supply pipe after a tap or valve is closed eventually cools off and is wasted. The longer the supply pipe, the more heat lost.

When long lengths of hot water supply pipe are unavoidable, insulate them to reduce losses. Hardware stores sell hot water pipe insulation kits.

For more information on water heating, check out the following Web sites: www.ahrinet.org and www.energystar.gov.

Energy You’ll Save: Lowering your water heater temperature setting from 1400 F to 1200 F can reduce your water heating energy bill by more than 10 percent.

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Can you smell that smell? America’s Infrastructure Part 4

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Sewers. We all need them, but are we taking care of them? And what are they doing to our natural water systems? I have talked about some of the issues that are facing us with Cleveland’s sewer systems. This problem, however, is not limited to Cleveland or NE Ohio. It is a fundamental problem with the infrastructure in America that need to be addressed. The damage to our ecological system could be devastating.

America has over one million sewer systems. They handle 900 billion gallons of waste every year. Unfortunately, many of the most important are inadequate to handle the population and development that have been added to them. Unlike water pipes, sewer systems are not pressurized, so tree roots and other outside destructive forces can damage sewer pipelines easier. Add to that the fact that sewage has a high acid content that erodes and breaks down concrete, and you have a recipe for disaster. While we continue to add development we rarely add the infrastructure needed to keep up. What elected official wants to be the one to spend a few million dollars to fix pipes underground that no one sees, especially if it means tearing up streets and snarling traffic that everyone sees? I wanted to add a little video, to illustrate the problems we are facing with our sewer systems. This one seems to be the least disgusting, but there are plenty on You Tube that illuminate the problem quite clearly.

Many older cities, like Cleveland, have combined sewer and stormwater systems. That means that our taxed sewers also handle the rainwater as it runs off the streets. Whenever we have a huge downpour, and we have plenty in Cleveland, this rain can overflow the entire system. Overflows mean raw sewage flows into the river and lake, where people swim and even fish. We have a delicate ecosystem. It was created to handle human and animal waste and break it down. Unfortunately, it cannot handle the huge amounts of waste created by our large cities and huge amounts of waste from our growing populations. And stormwater runoff is dirty enough on its own. Loaded with the oil, litter, chemicals, weed killer, and other toxins that we dump onto our concrete every single minute, stormwater is becoming more increasingly a toxic soup that threatens the environment. Cleveland is by no means alone in having this problem. Some 700 cities across the country experience overflow problems every year.

In addition to addressing the problems by renovating and throwing money at them, we need to also think about changing how we look at these issues moving forward. We need to increase green spaces, bio swales, porous concrete and other innovations to handle rainwater. Any reduction in stormwater runoff will decrease our need for infrastructure. We need to stop paving America and start greening it. We need to do start implementing plans to revamp and renew our aging sewer systems, and remove storm drains from the sewage lines. In our own homes, we can reduce our use of water and disconnect our downspouts by adding rain barrels to ease demand on the system. Lastly, we need to address future challenges as we build developments, rather than waiting for them to become problems of their own. I wonder how much the sewer system was revamped in Tremont to handle all the new development going on there. Was there a strategy developed, or was it simply piled on top of the problems the city already faced?

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Dam It! America’s Infrastructure Part 3

Monday, October 19th, 2009

I wrote about roads and bridges. I started this thread by talking about drinking water and the issues that surround our pipelines. When it comes to water, the pipelines are only part of the problem. Before the water ever gets to the pipes, it meets quite a lot of America’s failing infrastructure, like dams and levees. These dams and levees also keep out raging river waters, stormwater run-off, and even scarier environmental concerns like fly ash.

America’s dams are an average of 51 years old. Built without the benefit of the technology that we have today. We have approximately 85,000 dams in the United States, and some 4000 of these are deemed potentially unsafe. Of these 1800 are considered high hazard, which means that should they fail, there could be great loss of life and huge property damage. We needn’t look too far back to see the potential for devastation should any of these dams or levees breach. New Orleans is grim reminder of how our aging infrastructure has failed to keep us safe from harm, and it continues to struggle in its recovery. What city will be next?

Consider the very real threat to Nashville, and large parts of Tennessee. The Wolf Creek Dam is situated some 250 river miles upstream from Nashville. Construction began on the dam in 1941, and was completed in 1950, long before the computer age. Behind it lies Lake Cumberland, with 66,000 surface acres and an average depth of 90 feet. That is a lot of water to hold back. What wasn’t known in the 40′s was how precarious it is to construct a dam on porous limestone. Over the years, water has been eroding away at channels in the rock and wearing away at the foundations of the dam. Were it not for the sink holes that developed in the early 2000′s, engineers may not have even discovered the problems before it was too late. Since that time, they have poured tons of rock, concrete and grout into the foundations to make them hold up, and in the end found that this was not enough. They had to start construction on a whole new wall to make the dam really safe once again. Were it to burst, the water in the lake would race down the Cumberland River flooding hundreds of towns along the way, including Nashville, Tennessee-which would be as much as 20 feet underwater. Additionally, we cannot estimate the economic damage, as the Cumberland River is part of the vast connected network of waterways that we use to ship goods inside the US.

Dams hold back more than just water. Much of our electricity in the US is supplied by coal burning power plants. Beyond the CO2 issues with coal generated electricity, there are toxic water issues that are rarely mentioned. That came to the forefront last year when a dam burst holding back fly ash sludge, a by product of local coal plants. This released a river of waste that destroyed homes, land, and lives. I think that we have only begun to see the health issues that are likely to arise from this catastrophe, as fly ash is loaded with heavy metals like arsenic that leech into groundwater. Most sad of all, is that fly ash can be substituted for Portland Cement in large quantities when making concrete, so this waste stream could have been put to use.

Dams in America are valuable assets, as long as they hold. They require maintenance and inspection to keep them in top shape. Yet, with the thousands of dams across our country, there are few inspectors to oversee them. Some states have only one or two full time inspectors, and some have none whatsoever. Add to that the loss of manufacturing. There are hundreds of smaller dams that were originally built by corporations that have been abandoned. Inherited by the states where they reside, little may be known about their safety or even their construction.

But dams are not our only issue. Built to hold back water in times of high flow are thousands of levees. These are woefully inadequate in America. Many fail during peak rises in the Mississippi, and we all know what can happen to a city highly dependent on them, like New Orleans, during natural disaster. The issue in some areas is huge, and relatively unknown by the majority of Americans. While California deals with budget shortfalls and wildfires, there is a brewing problem that no one talks about. Much of the southern part of the state is supplied by drinking water from the Clifton Fore bay, which is fed by the San Francisco Delta. The delta is region of some 1000 square miles that was created from marshes by building hundreds of dirt levees. Built in the 1800′s by farmers om soft peat soil, these hold back excess river water that goes into the San Francisco Bay. Since their creation, this land has sunk some 25 feet, meaning that it is below the water line and must be constantly pumped to keep it dry. If there were a large earthquake near the levees, like the one that hit California in the 80′s, these levees are likely to fail. That would flood the entire delta, and as a reslut it would suck slat water from the bay into the basin and its water system. The Clifton Forebay would have to close, to keep the salt water out. With rationing, Southern California could last 6-12 months, but it would take 2 years or more for the watershed to return to normal and salt levels to normalize. A stretch? There are estimates that there is a 66% chance of this kind of earthquake happening in the next 30 years, but with a cost of $25-$40 million per square mile to fix the problem, it is an issue that is not likely to be dealt with soon.

As long as we continue with business as usual, the problem will only continue to get worse. We have to start building more sustainably as we go forward. By using some of these materials, like fly ash, in our construction, we can alleviate some of the burden. By investing in renewables, we can decrease the output of fly ash to begin with. By restricting our development to areas that can support themselves, we can reduce the need for more infrastructure like the kind we created to make LA an oasis rather than a desert. And by building less in flood plains we sill diminish our need for levees and the maintenance they require.

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Lake Erie really floats my boat!

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

If you are wondering what to do this Saturday, why not come join the fun at Edgewater Park? Saturday October 3 is the Lake Erie Boat Float. Inspired partly by Marcus Erikson, the Biodiversity Alliance sponsored the Boat Float to raise awareness of the issues surrounding plastics waste and its damage to the water ecosystems. From their site…

In 2003 Marcus Eriksen sailed down the Mississippi River on a plastic raft called Bottle Rocket

In 2008 he sailed across the Pacific Ocean on a raft made of 15,000 plastic bottles called JUNK

In 2009 he will sail Lake Erie on a raft made of bottles called The COLA-HOGA!

I think that if they have this event again next year, then we will have to participate. All elements of the construction need to be made from post consumer materials. I can’t wait to see what some people have come up with to create a boat out of pop bottles…

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