Tag: South America

Your friendly neighborhood Sinkhole: a sign of things to come?

by | 6.1.2010 at 3:20pm

Your old infrastructure is going to eat you alive.

Well, maybe not you, exactly, but it is eating some people alive.

I’m talking about the astounding sinkhole that formed in Guatemala City over the weekend.

The Water Conflict in Ecuador

by | 5.14.2010 at 3:43pm | 1 Comment

Over the last year, the government has been working on passing a new water bill, the Hydraulic Resources Law, which would, as I understand it, allow the concessions to stand, codify privatization of water rights and centralize decision-making at the state level, possibly further excluding traditional local water-management structures from the process. In the last weeks an estimated 10,000 protesters have descended on the capitol city of Quito, trying to stop the bill as it comes before the national assembly.

Sustainable water systems in rural Brazil

by | 4.27.2010 at 10:24am | 1 Comment

One of Columbia Water Center’s major programs, funded by the PepsiCo Foundation, is to develop water infrastructure in rural Brazil, in areas that have had no public water service.  CWC’s local Director, Francisco de Assis de Souza Filho, was recently in New York, and on April 23 gave a talk about ‘Designing Sustainable Water Systems: [...]

The Guarani Aquifer: a little known water resource in South America gets a voice

by | 4.13.2010 at 12:55pm | 1 Comment

By Annabel Symington

The Guarani Aquifer in South America is a huge underground reservoir that lies under Paraguay, Uruguay, Argentina and Brazil, covering an area of land the size of Texas and California combined.

Dam Break in Northeast Brazil: Can We Blame Global Warming?

by | 5.29.2009 at 7:50pm

Nordeste, the driest region in Brazil, has been castigated by heavy rainfall in the last two months. Yesterday a dam broke in the state of Piaui killing at least four people. The video below shows a partial bridge that collapsed after the dam break. The media shows every day more and more news about natural catastrophes. But is there enough evidences and facts to affirm that the frequency of extreme rainfall events is increasing across the globe? If so, can we blame global warming? or we just don’t understand the nature yet?

Water for Profit?

by | 3.16.2009 at 10:24am | 6 Comments

I’ve long been fascinated by the concept of privatization of water.  I can think of few topics related to natural resources that are so controversial.  I tend to reject the claim, espoused by many including former Water Center speaker Maude Barlow, that water is a basic human right and therefore should never be private.  While water [...]