climateadaptation:

Hillary Clinton on water security. 

You know better than any that water management and resource issues are both a moral imperative and a strategic investment, and I want to thank everyone who has participated in this, because whether you’re talking about economic development or improving global health, whether you focus on promoting food security or building peace or coping with climate change or providing sustainable energy, access to clean water is critical. And the problems that are already coming to the forefront around the world will only intensify as populations grow and demands increase.

Now, this year alone in the United States, we’ve experienced extreme drought conditions in some parts of our country and devastating floods in others. We are well aware that Europe, Asia, and Africa have all experienced similar challenges. Now, you’ve already heard about our Intelligence Community Assessment on Global Water Security, and I hope that you will have if you didn’t today have a chance to really study it, because water scarcity could have profound implications for security. The report found that dwindling supplies and poor management of water resources will certainly affect millions of people as food and crops grow scarcer and access to water more difficult to obtain. In fact, in some places, the water tables are already more depleted than we thought and wells are drying up…

We can’t wait until we already have a crisis. So I think water should be a priority in every nation’s foreign policy and domestic agenda, and we need to work together to advance cooperation on shared waters. Here at the UN, we have to work in our continuing efforts to ensure no child dies of a water-related disease and certainly no war is ever fought over water.

statedept:

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton delivers remarks at the roundtable on water security at the United Nations in New York, New York on September 25, 2012. A text transcript can be found at http://www.state.gov/secretary/transcript.


Minnesota yields best in the corn belt, USDA says, via twincities


Food Prices & Model Simulation, via New England Complex Systems Institute


U.S. Drought Could Cause Global Unrest, via wired


A World Without Water, photoset, via foreignpolicy


Plasma Gasification Raises Hopes of Clean Energy From Garbage

“David Robau tours the country promoting a system that sounds too good to be true: It devours municipal garbage, recycles metals, blasts toxic contaminants and produces electricity and usable byproducts — all with drastic reductions in emissions.”

Plasma Gasification Raises Hopes of Clean Energy From Garbage


A staggering $25 billion in crop insurance claims to be filed by growers across the U.S. due to worst drought in decades

climateadaptation:

This finely written article explains how this year’s record drought affects insurance payouts to farmers for losses. Farmers insurance is subsidized by the Dept. of Agriculture. And the rates are capped, as well. Thus, farmers in the program only pay 40% of their insurance costs. Imagine the government paying 60% of your insurance premium for, say, your car. Socialism indeed.  

Thousands of farmers are filing insurance claims this year after drought and triple-digit temperatures burned up crops across the nation’s Corn Belt, and some experts are predicting record insurance losses — exacerbated by changes that reduced some growers’ premiums.

G.A. “Art” Barnaby, a Kansas State University Extension specialist in risk management, estimates underwriting losses on taxpayer-subsidized crop insurance will hit nearly $15 billion this year. He expects a staggering $25 billion in crop insurance claims to be filed by growers across the nation, driven primarily by one of the worst droughts in the U.S. decades. His loss estimate is based on a loss ratio of $2.50 for every dollar paid in premium.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Risk Management Agency made changes to the insurance program in the past year which are expected to increase the underwriting losses from the drought. The changes meant farmers in some states paid smaller premiums this year for corn and soybeans. Not only that, the agency adjusted yields for those crops upwards to reflect recent trends, Barnaby said.

“Anyone that is concerned about whether this will be sustainable over time will have to ask the question whether this was a good idea to cut rates,” said Barnaby, who 20 years ago helped develop the insurance program. “Now, as a farmer, I like paying a lower rate. But my guess is the rates were not cut that much to be noticeable, but in aggregate they do make a difference.”

The rate reductions were based on the assumption that new technology, such as genetically modified, drought-resistant seeds, would eliminate or reduce big losses, Barnaby said. “So it is ironic they got hit the first year out.”

Under taxpayer-subsidized crop insurance, farmers pay about 40 percent of the premium cost and the federal government picks up the rest. The government sets the rates and the underwriting rules, but the private companies get to pick the contracts they want to take a risk on. Coverage is based on both yield and price. An underwriting loss or gain represents the difference between premiums paid and amount of claims paid.

Read it: Roxana Hegemen of the Associated Press

A staggering $25 billion in crop insurance claims to be filed by growers across the U.S. due to worst drought in decades


Will Water Become the Chief Commodity of the 21st Century?: Scientific American

wildcat2030:

See on Scoop.itThe Future of Water & Waste

The world faces a growing number of challenges surrounding water, from freshwater supply to flooding…

See on scientificamerican.com


The [town-country] rivalry is as false as the idea that an island is limited by water and defined by it, a landsman’s thinking which has no meaning for fishermen whose unending coming and going between the land and the sea breaks down the barriers between the elements to create a necessary unity of two apparently incompatible domains. The rivalry between town and country, which has for so long paralyzed the land, is also, above all, an urban concept.

André Corboz, from The Land as Palimpsest


“a map for what?” – mammoth // building nothing out of something

“What is the “aftermath” of the touring, the mapping, the listening and smelling, the playing of games?” – Shannon Mattern

“a map for what?” – mammoth // building nothing out of something