Resilient Cities 07: Planning Resilient Agriculture and Food Systems
Resilient Cities Team
Resilient Cities 07: Planning Resilient Agriculture and Food Systems
Cary Lowe
Law Office of Cary Lowe
Cary D. Lowe co-chaired the Water Policy Implementation Task Force and is a California land use lawyer with 35 years of experience representing property owners, land developers, builders, public agencies, Indian tribes, citizen groups and non-profit organizations, in connection with a broad range of land use and environmental issues. In addition to being an attorney, Mr. Lowe holds a Ph.D. in urban planning and has been admitted to the American Institute of Certified Planners.
Resilient Cities Team
Resilient Cities 07: Planning Resilient Agriculture and Food Systems
Resilent Cities Team
Resilient Cities 04: Building a Resilient Water System
Lakis Polycarpou
Groundwater levels are dropping across a much wider swath of the United States than is generally discussed, according to a new report from the Columbia Water Center.
Danielle Nierenberg
This Saturday, March 22nd, the world celebrates World Water Day. Water and agriculture are inextricably interlinked and interdependent. Agriculture is a major user of both ground and surface water for irrigation—accounting for about 70 percent of water withdrawal worldwide.
European Geosciences Union - See Abstract
Abstract. There is growing concern in Europe about the possible rise in the severity and frequency of extreme drought events as a manifestation of climate change.
Diego J. Rodriguez
Thirsty Energy – World Bank launches global initiative on Energy and Water
Dear colleagues and friends,
Peter Brabeck-Letmathe
Mighty River Jordan matters more than any other river – for three religions, for the people living alongside it, for thousands of years of history and as both a joint resource and a dividing line for countries in today's rather difficult political environment.
Xinhua
United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon on Tuesday warned that by 2030, half the people on Earth would be living under "water stress," a measure defined as less than 1,700 cubic meters of water available per person per year, unless action was taken.