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Jonathan M. Winer

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Water Power

Posted: 12/30/09 11:51 AM ET

Think of this: history's winners and losers have been determined by how well they handle their water.

In "Water," Steven Solomon traces the major turning points in world history to water innovation. People living in flooded river valleys had more food and learned how to store it. This led to food security and then prosperity through trade. Further mastery of water by way of new technologies, from barge and sailboat to mill and steam-engine, led to more prosperity and more trade, to the sanitary revolution of the 19th century and to the desalinization plants of today.

The book courses through water battles from Marc Antony and Octavian at the Battle of Actium to Nelson and Napoleon at Trafalgar; from water allocations devised by King Solomon to those advocated by ex-IMF head Michel Camdessus; from ancient water scientists such as Aristotle and Archimedes to early industrial-agers James Watt and Eli Whitney; and through environmentally oblivious leaders from Genghis Khan, who didn't understand water management, to George Bush, who in 2006 directed the dropping of 400 cases of illegal industrial discharges into wetlands his predecessors had protected under the Clean Water Act.

In covering personalities and events, Solomon suggests that societies that know how to take advantage of new ways of using water dominate their time, while those that fail to address water crises disintegrate. He cites with approval drip irrigation methods in Israel combined with shutting-down water subsidies, and as a counter-example, Saudi Arabian golf-course putting greens profligately maintained by tapping ancient, and rapidly declining, desert deep aquifers. He also suggests the dangers of concentrating water projects, noting for example, that the most gigantic water projects make inviting military and terrorist targets. For example, a bombing of Egypt's Aswan Dam could potentially create a tsunami of an order of magnitude greater than what took place in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. According to Solomon, fear of what might happen in the course of a war to the High Dam was a factor in convincing Anwar Sadat to make peace with Israel.

Identifying water scarcity as the next inconvenient truth, Solomon makes arguments about water that are familiar from discussions about global warming and energy use. Water is precious and should be conserved, but conservation requires unpopular political decisions. There is always the hope of new technologies, like reverse osmotic devices for desalinization, but as with solar energy for power, these remain too costly to be widely practical, absent massive government subsidies.

Solomon suggests that the world should ultimately recognize access to clean, safe, fresh water as a basic human right, noting that its absence tends to produce famines, genocides, wars, disease, mass migrations, and ecological disasters. In the past, social and political tools to respond were often grossly inadequate to meet these demands. Today, the issue is not so much technological gaps, as a failure of will. Amsterdam and Venice provide contrasts in how to manage a watery world, as does India in and of itself, where large-scale projects funded by global international financial institutions have both made it possible to sustain vastly greater populations, while salinizing essential agriculture land. There is no water panacea. But there are many types of water cures.

While at the U.S State Department in the Clinton Administration, I witnessed first-hand the incapacity of the government of Haiti to provide reliable power and clean water to its people by failing to maintain a vital hydroelectric plant. By contrast, I saw an inexpensive dam and turbine placed in a strategically-located stream provide electrical power and irrigation for winter rice to a remote rural village in Laos, making them food sufficient, enabling them to make textiles with power looms, and freeing them from dependence on opium as a cash crop. This was transformative, and nearly instantaneous, water-induced change.

Yes, political leadership on water matters. A decade ago, Perrier chose to pay upstream landowners $230 per hectare per year to reforest water infiltration zones and thereby protect the quality of its mineral water sources. The private sector has an important role to play. But at just under $10 a gallon for corporate water ($2.49 per liter in the familiar green glass), we will need a less expensive, out of the bottle, approach, one that is global in scope, local in reach, and soon.

 
Think of this: history's winners and losers have been determined by how well they handle their water. In "Water," Steven Solomon traces the major turning points in world history to water innovation.
Think of this: history's winners and losers have been determined by how well they handle their water. In "Water," Steven Solomon traces the major turning points in world history to water innovation.
 
 
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05:29 PM on 01/05/2010
This is a very important piece. I hope this will be circulated far and wide. These are the kinds of issues that should be afforded more attention by the media and the public.
12:13 PM on 01/03/2010
fresh water is an issue and needs to be addressed with global attention to local water systems. We need to share knowledge, technology, and laws about water usage.
http://agvatatil.blogspot.com/
09:40 AM on 12/31/2009
Water is a perfect example of 'all politics are local'. It would be great to start seeing a shift in the relationship between federal and local governments change. For instance, how can the LA area be entitled to water to the extent that it causes ruination for a thousand miles to the west where the Colorado River is running dry? And then how is it that my western MA region is contemplating wasteful, dirty Biomass plants for electricity when we are lousy with river-based hydro energy?

Time to scrap all the water policies and start over with a system where water is treated as a public resource to be protected, shared, and when all human/domestic/civil needs are met, perhaps rented out to industry for profit.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tulka2
Solidarity. Courage. Humor.
04:52 PM on 12/30/2009
I live in Bellingham, WA. One of the first things Homeland security did in this county after 9/11 was throw chain link and razor wire up around our water stations. I can not get anyone to pay attention to this fact. More than 900 Homeland security employees have moved to this country since 9/11. We have about as much water as any other county in America. Did your city water supply get surrounded by chain link after 9/11? The water here used to belong to the people here. I am not confident it any longer does. You have to be careful what you say in a small place and so i merely wrote a letter to the paper once. No city official wants to comment. No one talks about it. It is spooky.
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Welib
Peace on Earth!
02:28 PM on 12/30/2009
Let's put the Republicans back in charge and they can invade Canada and take her water.
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MrDiogenes
03:03 PM on 12/30/2009
This isn’t Dune yet! Let’s keep invading other countries for oil, until we run out of countries or oil, whichever comes first! LOL!
02:07 PM on 12/30/2009
Water is a real issue. Maybe now that this climate change hysteria is fading away we'll have the time and money to commit to real, urgent problems like this one. The environmental movement has been completely dumbed down by the carbon obsession.
01:55 PM on 12/30/2009
Please get rid of corporate or vested thinking of over population. Talk of over consumption. if you do not see then see your lawn, swimming pool, car wash, big bath tub, soda, beer and you name it. It seer wastage of water. Average human need maximum 5-8 gallon water a day for drinking and for hygiene. Get yourself free from box thinking, and learn of Jainism and practice it. All problems solved without man made laws.
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MrDiogenes
02:08 PM on 12/30/2009
So, let me get this straight, in order to think “outside the box†one should get into a different box and confirm into thinking consistent with particular religious/spiritual dogma/belief system prevailing in that box? Thanks for your contribution!
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JScott
John Galt's last name is McGuffin-Smithee
03:27 PM on 12/31/2009
At least one comment pointed this out vaguely, all this bit about being efficient with water means nothing if we don't stop population growth.
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Ann Bedingham
artist/painter
01:35 PM on 12/30/2009
The conversation has quietly begun that overpopulation is the cause of most of the environmental and political global issues. The demand on the earths resources is greater with every person born on the globe. Years ago there was an experiment with rats that comes to mind. One rat in the cage was fine, second rat introduced to same cage was fine, third rat tension, and as more rats were introduced they turned on each other and tried to destroy one another. The over population conversation needs to get louder.
Books to read - Collapse and Clash of Civilizations.
01:55 PM on 12/30/2009
Please get rid of corporate or vested thinking of over population. Talk of over consumption. if you do not see then see your lawn, swimming pool, car wash, big bath tub, soda, beer and you name it. It seer wastage of water. Average human need maximum 5-8 gallon water a day for drinking and for hygiene. Get yourself free from box thinking, and learn of Jainism and practice it. All problems solved without man made laws.
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rucognizant
02:13 PM on 12/30/2009
Nice to know that someone besides me remembers that experiment with overcrowded rats.........
Actually they started to EAT one another with overcrowding!