As the world struggles to feed itself – using more land and more water – nutrient runoff from intensified agricultural production has triggered a systemic ecological threat.
Toxic algae blooms in rivers, lakes, estuaries, and deltas erupt annually on major water bodies from Lake Erie and the Mississippi River to Australia’s Darling River and China’s Yangtze River Delta. They are fouling public drinking water systems and affecting the health of millions of people. While warmer temperatures are exacerbating the blooms, recent reporting reveals little regulation or effective responses to solving this growing threat that affects water supplies, ecological stability, and some of the most biodiverse places on the planet.
Join expert to discuss the causes, consequences, and solutions to this escalating challenge in the United States and China. Keith Schneider (Circle of Blue) will share insights from a 6-part series into the drivers of Lake Erie’s toxic algae blooms Laura Johnson (National Center for Water Quality Research) will review the causes of blooms and highlight innovative solutions being researched by scientists and deployed by state governments and NGOs in the Great Lakes Region. Yuxiang Wang (Queens University) will talk about innovative solutions to halting algae blooms in China.
This webinar is part of the China Environment Forum’s Cultivating US and Chinese Climate Leadership on Food and Agriculture project and Vulnerable Deltas Initiative.