Troubled Waters

H2 鈥 Oh, no!

By Jackie Lee and Anna Ritz

鈥淗ey, you鈥檙e doing it again!鈥

The coaching words of Sesha Pochiaju ring through her roommates鈥 ears anytime she notices a lack of responsible water usage. Pochiaju, a graduate student at CU 麻豆影院, works in the university鈥檚 environmental center examining pressing issues like water shortages while pursuing a degree in environmental engineering. Some of her most current work includes examining the social and environmental consequences associated with water scarcity.

Many groups of people struggle with a reliable supply of safe water. There are a variety of Native American tribes throughout the United States that can鈥檛 access clean drinking materials. According to Pochiaju, the combination of increasing population and lack of water knowledge has created dangerous situations for tribes across the nation.

Many homeowners throughout the U.S.聽are currently more concerned about having the greenest lawn than saving water for those who need it most. Even CU is currently overwatering and irresponsibly watering different features around campus.

Pochiaju, among others, often sees聽sprinklers watering sidewalks and grass for hours on end.

She, 鈥渏ust feels bad because that鈥檚 good water being wasted.鈥

The worst part? Valuable groundwater is being used for the vegetation. The clean water that could be used to sustain human lives is being senselessly allocated for various flower presentations. Pochiaju said聽that water tables are being depleted, and that the water being used is not being replenished.

The problem isn鈥檛 resolved at the U.S.聽border. Many developing countries throughout Africa and Asia experience the injustice regarding water scarcity. According to the United Nations, unclean water is the second greatest cause of death among children in developing countries.

鈥淭he right to clean water is the right to survive,鈥 Pochiaju said.

While the right to survive is challenged with a lack of water, the issue is all too common everywhere around the world.

鈥淥ne should not be fighting for the most essential thing,鈥 she said.

Working closely with FLOWS (Foundations for Leaders Organizing for Water and Sustainability) Pochiaju聽is able to collaborate with peers as well as mentor Michelle Gabrieloff-Parish to provide eco-friendly water supplies to low income residents throughout 麻豆影院. Items like low flow shower heads help to conserve water that would otherwise be mindlessly wasted.

Beyond 麻豆影院, Pochiaju works with water scarcity problems in India, her home country.

鈥淭he problem is with the low income communities, especially the rural areas where they cannot afford to have so many pumps to get out water, and the drought areas are the most affected because they are semi-arid regions,鈥 Pochiaju said about聽the poverty stricken areas surrounding her home. Four thousand聽people die every day because of聽unsafe water.

鈥淚t鈥檚 time to wake up, to know what鈥檚 coming.鈥

Seven states and Mexico all have a legal right to water from the Colorado River System. And a series of agreements that divide it up. The problem 鈥斅燼ll the allocated water is a bit more than what actually exists. So even if everyone gets what they鈥檙e promised, the system crashes. There鈥檚 not enough water to go around. Then people have to cut back, but many people say no to that unless the other guy cuts back, too. Allocating water is not easy, and in the United States, the right to water is a priority-based system.

Infographic

In 2015 Change the Course completed a successful multi-year pilot in the Colorado River Basin that supported 17 restoration projects, from headwater rivers in the Rocky Mountains to the Colorado Delta in Mexico, attracted 20 diverse corporate sponsors, and engaged more than 140,000 people through conservation pledges. Change the Course is now expanding throughout North America.

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