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Page added on January 11, 2015

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Renowned universities join to solve world’s water woes

Renowned universities join to solve world’s water woes thumbnail

The Arava desert, a salty wasteland dotted with tufts of scrub, gets only about an inch of rain each year.

And yet cows lazily low at dairy farms that collectively produce nearly 8 million gallons of milk annually. Orange bell peppers flourish in a long swath of greenhouses that skirts the Jordanian border. Kibbutzim with vineyards somehow manage to churn out shiraz and sauvignon blanc, unfazed by the desert sun.

The clusters of farms and wineries in the Arava are a testament to Israel’s acumen in water technology. One of the most parched places on Earth has found a way to beat water woes once so severe that Israel’s national mood rose and fell with the changing level of the Sea of Galilee, a critical water source.

That expertise helps explain why the University of Chicago sought out Israel’s Ben-Gurion University to help tackle one of the world’s most worrisome problems – water scarcity.

In decades past, oil used to be the commodity that shaped geopolitics, and at times, ignited wars. In coming years, water will be the commodity with that kind of clout.

Water scarcity is no longer a problem buried in think tank monographs. It’s a crisis that has begun to have palpable, disturbing implications for much of the globe.

By 2030, nearly half of the world’s population will be living in regions saddled with severe water stress, the U.N. projects.

Over the last decade, the number of violent confrontations over water issues has risen fourfold, according to the Pacific Institute, a California-based think tank that studies global water scarcity.

The University of Chicago is tackling water scarcity because it believes it has a novel approach to the problem – relying on engineering at a molecular level to produce breakthroughs. The university opened its Institute of Molecular Engineering in 2011, and within a year talk began of putting water scarcity at the top of the institute’s agenda.

“There are shortages of water from the First World to the Third World,” said Steve Sibener, one of the University of Chicago scientists leading the research. “If you look at California, it has been a particularly dry year, and you can see how the whole West and Southwest can have boom and bust cycles that are likely to get worse. If you move onto the Middle East and Africa, you understand that water is precious – it’s like gold.

“It’s the issue of the day,” Sibener said. “Hundreds of millions of people are at risk of (not) having enough water.”

In laboratories in Chicago and the Israeli desert, scientists are crafting radical new approaches that may one day rejuvenate the world’s water-starved regions. One project uses a common inkjet printer to apply layers of chemicals to a water filter to repel bacteria and keep the filter clog-free.

Another turns radioactive isotopes into tracking devices to trace water movement through aquifers, a development that could lead to the discovery of vast new strata of groundwater. Still another effort strives to create filtering membranes that operate on a molecular level, using electrically charged, cilialike hairs to repel filter-fouling microbes. The goal is to complete research by the latter part of 2015.

Every experiment has representation from both the University of Chicago and Ben-Gurion. The University of Chicago brings to the collaboration its expertise in molecular engineering, while Ben-Gurion brings its experience of transforming water research into real-life applications.

For both universities, the collaboration represents an opportunity to parlay their top-shelf know-how into potential solutions for one of mankind’s most pressing priorities.

Three quarters of the world is covered by water, but less than 3 percent is fresh water. More than 3.4 million people die each year of diseases related to lack of safe drinking water such as diarrhea – 9 out of 10 of those deaths occur in developing countries. Water scarcity affects at least 700 million people in 43 countries, according to the U.N.

By 2025, the number of people living in areas without enough water will rise to 1.8 billion people, the U.N. states. Areas with annual water supplies below 1,000 cubic meters per person are regarded as water-scarce, according to the U.N.

The quest to ensure reliable sources of drinking water has stoked discord among nations for millennia – and still does today.

In the Nile Valley, tension has ramped up over a dam the Ethiopians are building that would dramatically cut back the amount of water Egypt gets from the Nile for irrigation and drinking water purposes.

In South Asia, the Pakistani government for years has accused India of building hydroelectric dams in the Indus Valley that rob Pakistan of water it needs for farm fields and human consumption.

Shortages can also spark violence. In the Bolivian city of Cochabamba in 2000, a 17-year-old teenager was killed and hundreds of people injured when the army stepped in to quell large protests over massive increases in water fees.

abq journal



6 Comments on "Renowned universities join to solve world’s water woes"

  1. Apneaman on Sun, 11th Jan 2015 3:00 pm 

    I’ll sleep better knowing MORE bloated academic institutes are publicly claiming to have yet another Techno Fix solution to our unsolvable predicaments.

    Techno Fix – Why Technology Won’t Save Us Or the Environment

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1MsUypIHZhc

  2. Rodster on Sun, 11th Jan 2015 3:19 pm 

    Technological Superstitions by JMG

    http://thearchdruidreport.blogspot.com/2014/09/technological-superstitions.html

  3. Go Speed Racer on Sun, 11th Jan 2015 7:58 pm 

    Yeah. Why does monkeying around with radio-isotopes suddenly cause you to have another bucketful of water. its government research welfare money. it wont put more water in the ground.

  4. drwater on Sun, 11th Jan 2015 11:11 pm 

    Nice to hear about research, but some of this is nothing new or major, and it is unlikely to result in major new sources of water. Might help lower costs in reusing wastewater. California and Australia universities have also done a ton of research in water resue/savings/efficiences.

    “One project uses a common inkjet printer to apply layers of chemicals to a water filter to repel bacteria and keep the filter clog-free.”

    We have been working on ways too keep filters clean for a long long time – backwashing, chemicals, air, etc., etc.

    “Another turns radioactive isotopes into tracking devices to trace water movement through aquifers, a development that could lead to the discovery of vast new strata of groundwater.”

    Not new. Been doing this in California for a long time. Lawrence Livermore Labs has done a lot of this, although mostly with stable isotopes rather than radioactive. We use carbon-14 for estimating groundwater ages, which can be pretty useful.

    “Still another effort strives to create filtering membranes that operate on a molecular level, using electrically charged, cilialike hairs to repel filter-fouling microbes. The goal is to complete research by the latter part of 2015.”

    Haven’t heard of this yet. Could be useful for wastewater filtration. There are a bunch of membrane technologies already used in the market.

  5. Bob Owens on Tue, 13th Jan 2015 2:40 pm 

    Of course behind this need for water are too many people! More water will just lead to more people. We can’t rationally use the water we have; what makes us think we can do better with more water? Let’s get real.

  6. Davy on Tue, 13th Jan 2015 4:25 pm 

    Good point Bobby O, my thoughts are that either liquid fuels, water shortages and or food shortages is going to bring this whole story of BAU to a head. A solid serious crisis is our only hope for attitude and lifestyle changes. There is no chance of solving these problems the old fashion way of problem solving. These issues are now predicaments. We require voluntary and involuntary forced change. It will be how we start addressing over population also.

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