Supplementary
Materials
On a more current basis, consider the following news coverage about water
issues. What are the stated and implied environmental ethics represented
in the different cases? Some
Background Global News:
World
water crisis. BBC Report
The world's supply of fresh water is running out. Already one person
in five has no access to safe drinking water.
Dawn
of a thirsty century
Friday, 2 June, 2000, 10:30 GMT 11:30 UK By Environment Correspondent
Alex Kirby
The amount of water in the world is limited. The human race, and the
other species which share the planet, cannot expect an infinite supply.
Water covers about two-thirds of the Earth's surface, admittedly. But
most is too salty for use. Only 2.5% of the world's water is not salty,
and two-thirds of that is locked up in the icecaps and glaciers.
Case Studies
NPR
Series on Water:
FRESH WATER IN SHORT SUPPLY
Morning Edition
Monday, May 18, 1998
-- NPR's Anne Garrels begins a series of reports on the precarious balance
between the supply and demand for fresh water around the world. With
populations increasing and the amount of available water staying the
same, scarcity is causing disputes, both within and between countries.
At stake are the livelihoods of individuals and the economic and political
stability of entire countries. (8:29)
WATER RESOURCES II
Morning Edition
Tuesday, May 19, 1998
-- NPR's Anne Garrels reports on part two of a five-part series focusing
on fresh water shortages. She reports from Yemen, where a population
explosion and modern developments have greatly endangered the ground
water supply. (8:08)
WATER SHORTAGES III
Morning Edition
Wednesday, May 20, 1998
-- NPR's Anne Garrels reports in part three of a five-part series on
fresh water shortages. She reports on the intensifying dispute among
countries bordering the Nile River over access to its resources. (8:45)
WATER USAGE IV
Morning Edition
Thursday, May 21, 1998
-- In part four of a week-long series on global water usage, Anne Garrels
reports on a program in Pakistan to improve the sewage system. Sewers
once were either non-existent, or plagued by governmental mismanagement.
Now residents are building and maintaining their own inexpensive sewer
systems. (8:23)
WATER USAGE V
Morning Edition
Friday, May 22, 1998
-- In the last of a five-part series on fresh water shortages, NPR's
Anne Garrels reports from Uzbekistan, where one of the largest inland
seas -- the Aral of Central Asia -- is suffering massive degradation.
(8:32)
Water Issues in Agriculture:
AGRICULTURAL RUNOFF
All Things Considered
Monday, October 20, 1997
NPR's John Nielsen talks to Robert from the eastern shore of the Chesapeake
Bay about a new plan to battle water pollution that arises from agricultural
runoff. The federal government would create a buffer zone where all
agriculture is prohibited. The zone would affect all the lakes, rivers,
and streams that flow into the Bay -- an area that extends from central
New York State to southern Virginia. Vice President Gore announced the
plan at Maryland farm late this afternoon. (3:30)
PFIESTERIA & CHICKENS
All Things Considered
Wednesday, September 17, 1997
NPR's John Nielsen examines the factors that maybe involved in the fish
kills reported along the Chesapeake Bay. In the past six weeks, three
rivers have been closed to commercial fishing after the discovery of
parasite-infested fish. Nutrients in the water appear to be encouraging
the proliferation of the parasite -- nutrients that may come from agricultural
runoff or other forms of water pollution. At the moment, investigators
are focusing on manure flowing into the rivers from the scores of chicken
farms along the Bay. But it's not clear that this is the cause of the
infestation. (6:00)
POLLUTED WATERS FOSTER TOXIC
ALGAE
Morning Edition
Thursday, May 07, 1998
-- In the final part of our series, NPR's John Nielsen reports that
water pollution is to blame for most toxic algae blooms. Enviromentalists
say tougher standards are needed to decrease polluted runoff from hog
and poultry farms and other sources. Some experts warn that farmers
may relocate rather than comply with the new rules. (8:21)
In Massachusetts
their is a local"flavor" to water disputes, reflecting our
history and our economically important crops.
Bog
stirs environmental debate
Division in Falmouth on cranberry growers' spread of pesticides
By Peter DeMarco, Globe Correspondent,
11/17/2003
FALMOUTH --
"The Herring War" of 1806 came to a climactic,
bloody end when protesters blasted a cannon full of dead fish onto Falmouth's
town green.
At the time, Coonamessett River mill owners and fishermen had been locked
in a contentious dispute over dams that prevented river herring from
migrating upstream. But when the cannon backfired, tragically killing
its pro-mill gunner, the combatants' anger eased and the war faded away.
Nearly 200 years later, the Coonamessett River's herring are once again
at the center of heated debate in Falmouth. But this time, fishermen
and environmentalists are pitted against one of Cape Cod's most treasured
symbols: the cranberry bog.
The debate, in its simplest form, comes down to whether the town should
continue to allow cranberries to be commercially grown and harvested
in the middle of a public river, a process that periodically involves
halting the river's natural flow.
The
Pacific Northwest: Agriculture vs. Wildlife
Klamath
River
Weekend Edition - Saturday
Saturday, June 16, 2001
Drought in the Klamath River Basin in Southern Oregon means farmers
are losing all of their agricultural water to the sucker fish. Nancy
Solomon (KLCC) reports.
Klamath Water
All Things Considered
Wednesday, July 25, 2001
NPR's Wendy Kaufman reports that some late rains have allowed authorities
to release some irrigation water to farmers in Oregon's Klamath River
Basin. Flows for irrigation had been stopped in order to protect endangered
fish. (1:30)
Klamath Basin
Protest
All Things Considered
Tuesday, August 21, 2001
NPR's Andy Bowers talks to Linda Wertheimer about today's protest in
Klamath Falls, Oregon. Thousands of people gathered to protest how the
government is managing a federal irrigation project. Water is scheduled
to be shut off to local farmers on Thursday in order to allow enough
water to sustain downstream fisheries. (4:00)
Klamath Falls Protests
Morning Edition
Wednesday, August 22, 2001
NPR's Andy Bowers reports on the protests in Klamath Falls, Oregon,
over federal restrictions on water to farmers. (4:14)
The
Walkerton "Affair"
Inside Walkerton - CBC Report
"We have a terrible tragedy here."
With those words, Ontario
Premier Mike Harris waded into the Walkerton, Ontario water crisis on
Friday, May 26, 2000. He addressed a crowd of reporters and residents
in the normally quiet town in the heart of Ontario's rural heartland;
a part of the province that normally gears up for a flood of funseekers
at this time of year.
Instead, Walkerton began
the transition into the town "where those kids died from E. coli". It's
not what anyone wanted, but it was the end result. Reporters from around
North America descended on the area, trying to get to the bottom of
what's being described as Canada's worst-ever outbreak of E. coli contamination.
Seven people died from drinking contaminated water. Hundreds suffered
from the symptoms of the disease, not knowing if they too would die.
Groundwater
Pollution: The Case of MTBE
GAS ADDITIVE MTBE
All Things Considered
Wednesday, November 25, 1998
What began as a program to fight air pollution has now necessitated
dozens of costly studies and created a public health concern. The gas
additive MTBE helps to lower tail-pipe emissions-- but it also contaminates
ground-water. As the state of California looks for ways to cleanup its
water supplies, the governor of Maine is also asking the EPA to let
his state get out of the reformulated gas program that mandates the
use of gas oxygenates like MTBE. Some activists say it's possible to
meet clean air standards without using MTBE or any other oxygen additive...
and they have gas suppliers ready to deliver the new product. NPR's
Allison Aubrey reports.(5:30)
CONTAMINATED WATER &
DEFORMITIES
Morning Edition
Friday, January 02, 1998
-- Mary Losure of Minnesota Public Radio reports that scientists have
linked the frequency of deformed frogs to contaminated well and ground
water. Health experts are now investigating whether those same contaminants
pose a risk to humans. (7:19)
Water
and the Market: Should water be "priced"?
A heated international debate
is emerging about how the human community might best come to value the
water upon which it so dearly depends. In market integrated societies
many argue that the only way to value water is to give it a "price."
Costly goods are valued, it is argued, therefore if you want people
to value something you must give it a price and preferably a high price.
Others argue that any "price"
cannot ever capture "value." Further, they argue that every known
pricing mechanism merely works to strengthen those already strong in
the market place, victimizing those with little purchasing power.
In short, they argue that pricing water will victimize the very poor
even more than they are currently exploited.
Consider the following stories. Then develop an assessment and an opinion
on whether or how water should be priced. What ethical implications
are imbedded in your thinking?
WATER - Price of
Water is highest for the poor
Weekend Edition - Saturday
Saturday, May 09, 1998
NPR''s Anne Garrels reports from Karachi, Pakistan, on the too high
price of water, especially for the poor. (5:30)
CHINA WATER
All Things Considered
Tuesday, April 07, 1998
NPR's Mary Kay Magistad visits the Huai (HWIGH) River basin in eastern
China, where the government has ordered the cleanup of some of the country's
worst water pollution. Small factories and businesses have dumped so
many pollutants into the river that residents say even pigs sometimes
won't drink the water. People living downstream have had to depend on
trucks to bring them water each day because their own water supply is
unusable. One problem with the cleanup is enforcing the edicts of the
central government, but area residents are starting to report violations;
they know what it's like to live with contaminated water. (7:00)
Pricing
Water: Case Study -- The Canadian Controversy
Provincial government reverses ban on bulk water
Natalie
Clancy report.
ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. - The Newfoundland government has reversed its position
on bulk water shipments from Gisborne Lake, much to the shock of opposition
leaders and the federal government.
CBC's - The Future of Canada's Water
Canada lucked out in the global water sweeps. We
are near the top of water-rich nations, trailing only Brazil, Russia
and China.
Thanks to the replenishing cycle of rain and evaporation,
the amount of water on Earth has remained the same over the past four
billion years. Only in this generation has there been concern that we
may be ruining our water supply. Of all the water on our planet, 97.5
per cent is sea water and three-quarters of the remaining 2.5 per cent
is locked in polar ice caps. The tiny bit left over is drinkable.
Gerry White is
an entrepreneur who wants to sell Canada's water to the world and
sees no reason why he should be prevented from doing so.
Specifically, he wants to sell water from Gisborne
Lake in Newfoundland. The lake is 16 kilometres long and 10 kilometres
wide, near the south coast of Newfoundland. White flew over Lake Gisborne
one summer day in 1996 and nearly didn't notice it because the water
is so clear.
Maude
Barlow is chair of the Council of Canadians, a citizens’
group with 100,000 members. She is the Joan of Arc of those opposed
to the sale of Canadian water.
"There is a common assumption that the world's
water supply is huge and infinite," Barlow has said. "This assumption
is false. At some time in the near future, water bankruptcy will result."
She cites a United Nations study that says by the
year 2025 – less than 25 years – two-thirds of the world
will be "water-poor."
"The wars of the future are going to be fought
over water," Barlow has declared.
The Blue Planet Project
- Council of Canadians
Blue
Gold: The Battle Against Corporate Theft of the World’s
Water By Maude Barlow and Tony Clarke
Links
Public
Services International: Water
in Public Hands
fact sheets on corporate corruption and water privatization
Links
Council
of Canadians
Drought & Flood
Relief in Canada and the United States
Sources for Global
Water Assessments:
The World Water Forum
The 2nd
World Water Forum - 17-22 March 2000, the Hague, Netherlands
The World's Water - WorldWater.Org - Peter
H. Gleick, Pacific Institute
Water data from: The
World's Water
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