July 26, 2009

The documentary: Blue Gold

Also available at the Kingston Public Library is the documentary, Blue Gold: World Water Wars. This is a film by Sam Bozzo that also looks at issues of water--the necessity of water for life, and serious problems of freshwater depletion, pollution, corporate and corrupt government actions where profit and greed rules above people and planet. Like Flow, it is disturbing, frustrating, alarming, and also provides examples of positive actions and solutions people are working and fighting for.

Although I haven't (yet) read them, a few books on this topic that one may also find of interest include:
  • Blue Gold: The Battle Against Corporate Theft of the World's Water (2002) by Maude Barlow and Tony Clarke [available at KFPL]
  • Blue Covenant: The Global Water Crisis and the Coming Battle for the Right to Water (2007) by Maude Barlow [available at KFPL]
Apparently, the City of Kingston, Ontario in which I live has set a goal of becoming Canada's Most Sustainable City. If Kingston -- and the people involved in planning and steering decisions -- are truly going to achieve this goal (and I hope they do), it will require vision, creativity, and courage (backbone, guts, a powerful humanitarian and earth-itarian vision coupled with much action). Looking at water usage and conversation issues must be one important aspect of this -- and an aspect that finds solutions and relationships across many sectors. Some examples off the top of my head include:
  • Building codes. Solutions include: substantial rainwater collection systems should be mandatory in all new developments, the use of graywater wherever appropriate and as much as possible.
  • Decisions about expansion and housing developments. Solutions include: seriously looking at what population and water usage can the watershed truly support to not be depleted and then to keep housing within that limit. If you want more people, then you MUST find innovative ways to reduce water usage and the impact on the watershed.
  • Food sources. Solutions include the dominant use of local food systems as a must and where within local food systems, sustainable practices are mandatory including rainwater collection systems as the key source of irrigation rather than groundwater/rivers/lakes, as well as looking at methods of growing foods that are also water-savvy (e.g., hyrdroponics).
  • Surface treatment and the issue of paving. Solutions include: having more non-paved surfaces and when a surface is paved, use only permeable paving materials so that rainwater goes into the ground and the groundwater table instead of running-off into the lakes
  • Pollution issues in all forms--and the prevention of further polluting and damaging water sources. This is a huge issue to look at as pollution comes from so many sources.
  • Trees. Plant trees. All streets and parks etc should be tree-lined (and how about with trees that produce food for people???). Tree roots and other plantings hold water in the watershed and help prevent run-off (as well as providing shade, homes to birds and creatures, oxygen, and other positive things). There are also ways of planting other plants and shrubs so as to catch water and slow/prevent run-off. This is also very helpful and important--not to mention aesthetically pleasing and adding plant diversity.
  • Other water conservation methods: low flow toilets, shower-heads etc. Why are new residences not being built with these things? This is unacceptable.
  • Say NO to bottled-water and the irresponsible mining of water by corporations for profit (and with no concerns for planet or people) and the privatization of water. Please watch the documentaries and read more to learn about these issues.
The list could go on as there as many innovative things that can and should be done. Many of these ideas are touched on in the documentaries, as well as more pertaining to the issue of serious issue of major multinational corporation's attempts to privatize and own water.

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