Sentences with phrase «water crisis so»

Francis said he wanted to use the time before the legislative hearings to highlight how Marchione had mishandled the water crisis so far.

Not exact matches

So a water crisis is rated both as the biggest global risk and the biggest opportunity for being solved.
So if churches in America decided that for ONE year, we would put aside only 1/3 of what we would owe the government in property taxes for that one year, we could solve the world's water crisis in one year!
With the California water crisis making headlines, many people are taking a closer look at the bottled water they are purchasing, and rightfully so.
2: So many people bring up the water issue and where I live we are in a water crisis.
Water markets are not a stand - alone solution to California's crisis — there are some problems water markets can not solve, and so state leaders will need to develop other policies for these challeWater markets are not a stand - alone solution to California's crisis — there are some problems water markets can not solve, and so state leaders will need to develop other policies for these challewater markets can not solve, and so state leaders will need to develop other policies for these challenges.
In the paper, the authors acknowledge that offshore groundwater «is not the answer to global water crises, but it has a strategic value that should be acknowledged so that it can be weighed against other options in long - term strategies.»
And as a threat to safe drinking water, So says, «sanitation is the big crisis
So Toledo and environs goes through a terrible water crisis when nutrient - rich water from farms, lawns, and other nonpoint sources flows into Lake Erie.
«Well, Buffalo's water may be fine but there's a public school crisis that's killing the futures of so many children.
Flint Public Library to archive stories of residents living through the water crisis (Michigan Radio) The Flint Public library is opening its recording studio to residents so they can tell their stories.
We just sit back and let water shortages occur (which will be the first crisis) and then droughts will diminish the food production so that millions will die and most likely begin fighting for resources amongst themselves and reducing the population to levels that we (the super rich) may have a chance to survive against.
But seen the environmental global CRISIS of GLOBAL WARMING and its devastating climatological impact, I would recommend as an environmental policy - expert that Both NATURAL plankton will be bred in shallow waters as carbondioxide inhibitors in a large volume on the one hand and let nature goes its course in the seas and oceans so that sea - organisms / life - forms / mamals will not become extinct due to (for them) food poisoning.
By the time the institutions of the old paradigm have fallen over the fuel, food, water crisis will be so acute that there will be little resource of any kind left over to devote to the climate crisis that may well finish us off as a race.
From boil water advisories on Indigenous reserves, to the opioid crisis, to the lack of affordable childcare, and the skyrocketing cost of education there are so many pressing issues impacting the health and survival of some this country's most vulnerable people.
Design kinks aside - such as how to power the mirror's LEDs if you're constantly reducing the flow of water down the drain and so reducing the amount of harvested energy, and if that's even a way to harvest enough energy for 1 LED, let alone dozens - if you needed a way to keep the water crisis front and center during your morning routine, this would be the design for you.
So juggling the resources is no small task, especially with a pressing water crisis.
So far, much of the coverage of Detroit's water crisis has assumed that the problem is specific to Detroit.
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