Cargo ships on the Rhine River, in Germany. Photo © J. Carl Ganter/Circle of Blue Perspective | Water is the New Carbon Provocative? Perhaps. But true. In a new op-ed for Circle of Blue, Jay Famglietti, Jose Ignacio Galindo, Palash Sanyal, and Li Xu at Waterplan, a water risk monitoring platform, say water is the new carbon. When it comes to acknowledging society’s impact on climate, environment, and human security, water is the next frontier for comprehensive accounting and adaptation strategies – for industry, municipalities, governments, and individuals, all of which have made impressive commitments and progress to track carbon pollution. However, our increasingly threatened global water security demands that accounting for water use and risk rapidly acquire the same urgency with which we address carbon. The time for action on carbon has been widely and successfully accepted. The time for action on water is now. Jay Famiglietti is executive director of the Global Institute for Water Security (GIWS) at the University of Saskatchewan, and he serves as chief scientist of Waterplan. Jose Ignacio Galindo is co-founder & CEO of Waterplan. Palash Sanyal is the strategic partnership and project manager at GIWS, and Li Xu is a postdoctoral researcher there. Both are members of Waterplan’s science team. |