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Water Sustainability Flows Through Complex Human-Nature Interactions
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submitted by Samuel Bendett
Homeland Security News Wire - August 10, 2012
The fate of water in China mirrors problems across the world: water is fouled, pushed far from its natural origins, squandered, and exploited; China’s crisis is daunting, though not unique: two-thirds of China’s 669 cities have water shortages, more than 40 percent of its rivers are severely polluted, 80 percent of its lakes suffer from eutrophication — an over abundance of nutrients — and about 300 million rural residents lack access to safe drinking water
In this week’s Science journal, Jianguo “Jack” Liu, director of Michigan State University’s Center for Systems Integration and Sustainability, and doctoral student Wu Yang look at lessons learned in China and management strategies that hold solutions for China — and across the world.
A Michigan State University release reports that in their paper, “Water Sustainability for China and Beyond,” Liu and Yang outline China’s water crisis and recent leapfrog investment in water conservancy, and suggest addressing complex human-nature interactions for long-term water supply and quality.
Water Sustainability for China and Beyond (2 page .PDF file)
http://news.msu.edu/media/documents/2012/08/20993ec5-c49f-4533-bf06-9df002a713e8.pdf
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