Archive for water quality

Help Protect Australias Coral Sea

The Coral Sea is a tropical marine jewel which lies east of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park. It’s one of the last places on Earth where large marine animals can still be found in great numbers. It’s one of the last remaining places on Earth where populations of large ocean fish – sharks, tuna and billfish – have not been drastically reduced. With 90% of large ocean fish gone from the world’s oceans over the last 50 years due to overfishing, this makes the Coral Sea worth protecting. The Coral Sea has spectacular coral reefs, remote islands, towering underwater mountains and deep-sea canyons. Its abundant wildlife includes whales, dolphins, sea turtles, sharks and rays; seabirds; large ocean fish such as tuna, marlin, barracuda and swordfish and a diverse range of corals and reef fish.

We need to act now before it is to late. These beautiful natural santuraries are under threat and we cannot let them be destroyed!

for more information please head to: http://www.protectourcoralsea.org.au/coral-sea-help-protect-australia-s-coral-sea

source: www.greentimes.com.au

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Over 300 Pollutants in U.S. Tap Water

Since 2004, testing by water utilities has found 315 pollutants in the tap water Americans drink, according to an Environmental Working Group (EWG) drinking water quality analysis of almost 20 million records obtained from state water officials.

More than half of the chemicals detected are not subject to health or safety regulations and can legally be present in any amount. The federal government does have health guidelines for others, but 49 of these contaminants have been found in one place or another at levels above those guidelines, polluting the tap water for 53.6 million Americans. The government has not set a single new drinking water standard since 2001.

Water utilities spend 19 times more on water treatment chemicals every year than the federal government invests in protecting lakes and rivers from pollution in the first place.

Based on these data, EWG believes the federal government has a responsibility to do a national assessment of drinking water quality. It should establish new safety standards, set priorities for pollution prevention projects, and tell consumers about the full range of pollutants in their water.

Because it has not, EWG launched a 3-year project to create the largest drinking water quality database in existence. This user-friendly, interactive resource covers 48,000 communities in 45 states and the District of Columbia.

Cities with the Best Water

EWG rated big city (population over 250,000) water utilities based on three factors: the total number of chemicals detected since 2004; the percentage of chemicals found of those tested; and the highest average level for an individual pollutant, relative to legal limits or national average amounts, including for the most common pollutants (disinfection byproducts, nitrate and arsenic). [read more on rating methodology]

EWG’s Top-Rated and Lowest-Rated Water Utilities

TOP RATED WATER UTILITIES LOWEST RATED WATER UTILITIES
1 Arlington, TX
Arlington Water Utilities
100 Pensacola, FL
Emerald Coast Water Utility
2 Providence, RI
Providence Water
99 Riverside, CA
City of Riverside Public Utilities
3 Fort Worth, TX
Fort Worth Water Department
98 Las Vegas, NV
Las Vegas Valley Water District
4 Charleston, SC
Charleston Water System
97 Riverside County, CA
Eastern Municipal Water District
5 Boston, MA
Massachusetts Water Resources Authority
96 Reno, NV
Truckee Meadows Water Authority
6 Honolulu, HI
Board of Water Supply
(Honolulu/Windward/Pearl Harbor)
95 Houston, TX
City of Houston Public Works
7 Austin, TX
Austin Water Utility
94 Omaha, NE
Metropolitan Utilities District
8 Fairfax County, VA
Fairfax Water
93 North Las Vegas, NV
City of North Las Vegas Utilities Department
9 St. Louis, MO
City of St. Louis Water Division
92 San Diego, CA
San Diego Water Department
10 Minneapolis, MN
City of Minneapolis Water Department
91 Jacksonville, FL
JEA

For other cities in the usa click on the below link

Source http://www.ewg.org/tap-water/home

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EWG’s 2010 Shopper’s Guide to Pesticides in our food

The Shopper’s Guide to Pesticides is a key resource for consumers aiming for healthier diets. Since many shoppers can’t find or afford organic produce, they can use the Shopper’s Guide to avoid those conventional fruits and vegetables found to be highest in pesticides – the Dirty Dozen – and, instead, choose items from the Clean Fifteen list. Click here to get the guide http://www.foodnews.org/

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