2021.12.16
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Boats ply the waters of the Mekong River Delta, near Can Tho, Vietnam. Home to about 65 million people across four countries, the lower Mekong is also prized for its diversity of aquatic species. Photo © J. Carl Ganter / Circle of Blue

Perspective | More Attention Needed on Freshwater Biodiversity

Despite unprecedented and ongoing decline of freshwater resources, research and conservation related to freshwater ecosystems receive far less attention than those of terrestrial and marine realms. 

As a journalist, Stefan Lovgren has been asking why it is that freshwater issues are so often ignored. It doesn’t make sense. After all, fresh water is fundamental to life on Earth. Almost all of us live in river basins.

In a new op-ed for Circle of Blue, Stefan writes that if policymakers are to take action on freshwater ecosystems, scientists and conservationists need to coordinate to deliver a more forceful message. The good news is that we’re seeing more signs of that happening.

Tapped Out is produced in collaboration with the Institute for Nonprofit News (INN), California Health Report, Center for Collaborative Investigative Journalism, Circle of Blue, Colorado Public Radio, Columbia Insight, The Counter, High Country News, New Mexico In Depth and SJV Water. The project was made possible by a grant from the Water Foundation with additional support from INN.

This Central Valley Town Has a Carcinogen in its Water. Why Are Solutions So Slow?
By Claudia Boyd-Barrett, California Health Report

The water supply in Fuller Acres, California has been contaminated with a byproduct of agricultural soil fumigants for decades. Residents say officials aren’t doing enough to warn people.

Photo © Martin do Nascimento

High Costs, Few Customers: Benton Harbor Water Woes Loom for Michigan Cities
By Kelly House, Bridge Michigan

Shrinking populations and wealth have left many local governments unable to collect enough ratepayer revenue to cover long-term water system costs. 

Photo © Kelly House / Bridge Michigan 

What’s Up With Water – December 13, 2021

For the news you need to start the week, tune into “What’s Up With Water” fresh on Monday’s on iTunesSpotifyiHeart Radio, and SoundCloud.

Featured coverage from this week's episode of What's Up With Water looks at: 

  • In the Middle East, water scarcity could cause an international legal confrontation.
  • In the United States, government agencies in Hawaii are dealing with a water contamination crisis.

This week, Circle of Blue reviews the year’s water news, and the dominant themes are extreme weather, disaster response, and adaptation.

HotSpots H2O: Report Spotlights Funding Gap in Canada’s First Nations Water Crisis
 

Canada will need to spend significantly more to solve the decades-long water crisis in its Indigenous First Nations, according to a new report from the country’s federal budget officer. 

The report, published last week, found that the government has allocated more than enough funding to build the necessary water infrastructure. But an additional $138 million is needed annually to allow First Nations to maintain and operate those systems. This would mark a 50 percent increase from planned spending.

Without this investment, the report warns, “water-related infrastructure may continue to deteriorate at a faster-than-expected rate, and overall costs may continue to increase as the infrastructure ages.”

The ongoing crisis is generations in the making. Many of the country’s Indigenous communities haven’t had clean tap water for decades, often having been forcibly relocated from their ancestral lands. Nearly half of First Nations’ water systems have substantial deficiencies, a quarter of which are considered to be “high risk.” According to the latest report, these figures have barely budged since 2014, despite billions in federal investment.

From Circle of Blue's Archives: 

A trout surfaces in Michigan’s Au Sable River, one of the country’s prime trout habitats. Photo © J. Carl Ganter / Circle of Blue

International Target for Reducing Biodiversity Losses Not Met, UN Report Says


Despite global progress in preserving tropical forests and mangroves, no country would completely meet a 2010 target to reduce the loss of biodiversity, according to an assessment report released by the Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity.

The Convention on Biological Diversity's report Global Biodiversity Outlook 3 finds that they have not met that goal and in many cases, biodiversity continues to diminish.

This decline is happening as factors inimical to biodiversity are intensifying. The report identified five main areas of concern: habitat change, overexploitation of resources, pollution, invasive species and climate change.

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