water
I'm sure that plunging ahead with fracking will have no unintended consequences or deleterious effects on the environment. Going forward with the procedure without proper testing, oversight, or regulation is.
California refuses to deal with its water shortages in any kind of serious way. It's so bad that even the articles yelling at California about how to take it seriously.
This is 2 months old but I am doubtful any of you are familiar with the story. I was not until yesterday. Rio Tinto, one of the world's largest mining.
Almost all of our cities are built on top of prexisting waterways that now "flow" under our feet and roads. The water is still largely there but it's subsumed in.
Now that one book is in the can and the other is under review, I have time to read again. So I will review the recent books I get through.
Plumer has a good rundown of the complexity of dam building around the world. The world's rapidly growing demand for energy means that every way we can turn the natural.
More on America's most ridiculous industry: bottled water. Where are the sources of that water? Yeah, that's sustainable. But that only accounts for 55% of the bottled water. What about.
The obscene use of fertilizer and chemicals leads to algae blooms that make the water supply of Toledo undrinkable. The problem is exacerbated by the non-native zebra mussels that eliminate.