Anonymous ID: 86f246 water Feb. 15, 2018, 5:35 a.m. No.384880   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4900 >>4925

Hi anons just brainstorming here.

Q said watch the news. Q also said watch the water. So….

 

Creepy things I have found when I was searching on a browser (bing) and typed water in the newsfeeds I found this IN THE NEWS articles TODAY!!!

 

→ http:// theterramarproject. org/thedailycatch/clean-drinking-water-necessity-fixing-cities-water-crises-hurt-climate-targets/

Two cities on opposing continents, Santiago and Cape Town, have been brought to their knees by events at opposing ends of the climate spectrum: flood and drought.

The taps ran dry for Santiago’s 5 million inhabitants in early 2017, due to contamination of supplies by a massive rainfall event. And now Cape Town is heading towards “day zero” on May 11, after which residents will have to collect their drinking water from distribution points.

 

→ https:// zululandobserver .co.za/164900/water-wednesday-safety-tips-storing-drinking-water/

Water Wednesday: Safety tips for storing and drinking water

As more people dip into alternative water sources to augment their consumption needs amid the drought crisis in Cape Town, the city’s Health Department has cautioned against potential health risks in storing drinking water. Here are some safety tips.

 

→ https:// www.businessinsider .nl/drinking-water-could-get-dirtier-trump-infrastructure-plan-2018-2/?international=true&r=US

American drinking water could soon get a lot dirtier

The Trump administration’s new infrastructure plan aims to ease regulatory checks on US waterways.

The administration says this will help fast-track more building projects and reduce permit delays.

But some water experts are worried that it could put some of the country’s most fragile drinking water systems at risk, and put the expensive burden of water cleanup onto cities.

 

→ https:// www.annmariegianni. com/make-drinking-water-safe/

Water Contamination and the Best Way to Make Sure its Safe

 

→ https:// newrepublic. com/article/147066/flints-water-crisis-damage-kids-brains

Did Flint’s Water Crisis Damage Kids’ Brains?

Third-grade reading proficiency has plunged in the lead-poisoned city, setting off a debate about the possible causes.

 

→ https:// www.ndtv. com/india-news/gujarat-needs-water-madhya-pradesh-wont-allow-it-hint-election-1812030

Two BJP States, A Clash Over Water, And Shivraj Singh Chouhan's Election

Gujarat overcome with water crisis, needs more Narmada water

Madhya Pradesh refuses with eye on election later this year

Farmers furious, 5 shot dead last year in clashes with police

 

→ http:// english .alarabiya.net/en/business/economy/2018/02/15/Despite-protests-Iran-raises-prices-of-water-electricity-and-gas.html

While the protests across Iran continue against rising prices and the drop in living conditions, the Iranian parliament has agreed to increase water, electricity and gas costs during Iran's next year's budget, which starts on March 21 according to the Persian calendar.

 

→ http:// mobile.ghanaweb. com/GhanaHomePage/business/Stop-the-denial-of-water-rationing-GWCL-told-626489

 

→ https:// www.smithsonianmag .com/science-nature/day-zero-looms-cape-town-water-crisis-may-signify-new-normal-180968128/

Anonymous ID: 86f246 Feb. 15, 2018, 5:42 a.m. No.384917   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4926

>>384887

there are also articles on how companies want to own water resources like Nestlé bad for environment …

http:// www. thejournal.ie/michigan-town-water-nestle-3836344-Feb2018/

GLOBAL FOOD PROVIDER Nestlé is in a battle with critics in tiny Osceola Township, Michigan where residents complain the Swiss company’s water extraction techniques are ruining the environment.

Anonymous ID: 86f246 WHO OWNS OUR WATER? Feb. 15, 2018, 6:09 a.m. No.385108   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https:// www.ecori .org/natural-resources/2011/5/9/who-owns-our-water.html

 

The answer to the above question is a complicated one. In fact, the question of water ownership has been debated since at least ancient Rome, and today, some 2,000 years later, government, big business and Earth’s 6.9 billion and growing inhabitants are no closer to a consensus on who owns the tiny percentage of drinkable water on the planet.

Private ownership of water utilities has been growing worldwide for more than a decade. The number of people served by private water companies grew from 51 million in 1990 to nearly 300 million in 2002, according to the Journal of Water

Resources Planning and Management.

But even as we continue to debate water rights, one aspect of the issue is crystal clear: a third of the world — about 900 million people — doesn’t have adequate access to clean water.

Less than 1 percent of the water on the planet is drinkable untreated, and consumption of this resource varies across the globe. In the United States, each person, on average, uses about 150 gallons of water daily. In Britain, that per-person average falls to 30 gallons a day. In the world’s poorer countries, such as Kenya, millions of people subsist on less than 5 gallons a day.

Last July, the United Nations declared “safe and clean drinking water and sanitation a human right essential to the full enjoyment of life.” According to the U.N., a person needs 13 gallons of water a day for drinking, bathing and cooking.