And now:Ish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

ENVIRONMENT NEWS SERVICE (ENS)


GROWING POPULATION FACES SHRINKING WATER SUPPLY

AMERISCAN: JULY 20, 1999
For Full Text and Graphics Visit:  http://ens.lycos.com
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GROWING POPULATION FACES SHRINKING WATER SUPPLY

WASHINGTON, D.C., July 20, 1999 (ENS) - Increasing water shortages may lead
to global hunger, civil unrest and even war, according to Sandra Postel,
director of the Global Water Policy Project and senior fellow with the
Worldwatch Institute. In her new book, "Pillar of Sand: Can the Irrigation
Miracle Last," Postel joins the growing ranks of experts warning the world
to reduce water use now to avoid serious problems later.
Copyright Environment News Service (ENS) 1999
For full text and graphics visit:
http://ens.lycos.com/ens/jul99/1999L-07-20-01.html
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ENVIRONMENT NEWS SERVICE AMERISCAN: JULY 20, 1999

American Airlines Fined $95,000 for Using Air Polluting Fuel
Border Emissions Study Examines NAFTA’s Effects on Air Quality
Reintroduced Wolf Shot In Idaho for Killing Livestock
Forest Service Seeks Comments on Yellowstone Grizzly Recovery Plan
Rocks Tell Geologists About Water Pollution, Earthquakes
Flood Kills Trout at New Mexico Hatchery, Spares Endangered Gila Trout
Recycled Paper Does Not Gum Up the Works
Birkenstock Sandals Step Into Green Energy Deal
Now How Will They Find the Doors?

Copyright Environment News Service (ENS) 1999
For full text and graphics visit:
http://ens.lycos.com/ens/jul99/1999L-07-20-09.html

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TO ENVIRONMENTAL AND STATE EDITORS:

       `Save Some for Tomorrow'
     An Op-Ed Article by Carol Collier of the Delaware River Basin
Commission

      WEST TRENTON, N.J., July 20 -/E-Wire/-- The Delaware River Basin
Commission today issued the following op-ed article:

      Many of us take water for granted in this country.  We turn on the tap
and, whoosh, out it comes, a life sustaining substance that often costs less
per year than a subscription to cable TV.
     That's not true in some foreign lands.  There, the water may come on at
seven in the morning, then be turned off at two in the afternoon.  There's
just not enough to go around.  And it may not be fit to drink.
     /CONTACT:  Christopher Roberts of the Delaware River Basin Commission,
609-883-9500, ext. 205, or [EMAIL PROTECTED]/
     /Web site:  http://www.state.nj.us/drbc /
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