|  While of course the most prominent area of Green supply  chain focus is on fuels and CO2 emissions, issues relative to water usage,  ownership, costs and more are getting a lot more attention is recent years.
   Dr. Julie Zimmerman,  a professor of green engineering at the Yale School of Forestry &  Environmental Science, recently joined one of Yale’s Global Leadership: Big  Issues course, where she had some very interesting thoughts on water. 
 
 She comments to the class where recently published by the  Yale Insights web site, which we published excerpts from here on the  GreenSupplyChain.com:    
 “If you go back and you look at the  UN sustainable development goals, the number of people with access to clean  water has doubled in the last 20 years. So that’s people who will now have 20  liters per person per day, but there’s still over a billion people who don’t  have access to safe water. So it’s about 20% of the population.  “This is a really interesting debate that continues to rage. It’s been slowly,  I would say emerging, but is becoming more and more prominent. This idea of  whether water is a public good or a private good, and so there is the debate  that water should not be privatized, commodified, traded or exported in bulk  for commercial purposes: it is a public good.
 “And the other side of this said, water and food are basic rights, we pay for  food, why should we not pay for water? It’s really interesting and that is  where the model’s evolving to is these public-private partnerships. It becomes  interesting because you need good government oversight and regulation and then  the pricing structure becomes really important.
   “Just like you talk about embedded  carbon in products, we talk about embedded water. Just like you do a carbon  footprint, you can talk about a water footprint of a product. How much volume  of fresh water is used to produce that product over the production chain?  Whether I’m growing crops and I’m harvesting them like cotton and I’m  processing them, how much irrigation water goes into that crop? If I’m mining,  how much water am I using in that process? Like using cyanide to get gold and  how much water am I consuming in that? Or energy production, how much water am  I using in fracking and how do I account for that water across the entire  supply chain? “And then you can also ask questions about where that water’s coming from.  Because we know the geographical distribution of supply chain, I can say that’s  coming from a scarce basin or not. We know there’s water dependency. Most  countries in the EU, North Africa, and the Middle East are dependent on water  resources in other parts of the world. So just like oil is found in the Middle  East, you can start asking about which countries are water rich and are really  good at exploiting that resource and selling it to the rest of the world.
 “And then you can start to ask questions about from a global perspective, is  virtual water trade a mechanism to increase global water efficiency? What’s the  risk of shifting our environmental impacts from producing in our own country to  somewhere else? And then from a national perspective, not my academic  environmental perspective, is this a solution for me as a water-scarce country  and what is the risk of becoming water dependent? Of saying, “For my water  resource benefit I’m going to import those crops, that food, those products  from somewhere else,” and am I setting myself up for an alliance relationship  where I’m at a disadvantage because I need food to feed my people and I have  now said I can’t grow it or it doesn’t make sense for me to grow it in country.  I’m going to import those goods.
   “California, two years before the  drought, set audacious carbon goals that they were going to reduce carbon  emissions from the state of California and they spent tens of millions,  hundreds of millions of dollars upgrading the energy grid. So California’s  energy efficiency programs, here’s what they spent; here’s gigawatts of energy  they were able to save off the grid. Here’s the funding they put in. So, $1.5  billion in 2006 to 2008. Here’s the cost per kilowatt hour that they spent  saving those carbon emissions off the grid. “If I solve my water-use problem, it should also solve my energy problem, which  will solve my climate change problem.
   “We went in and said, “If you had  tried to address your carbon goals through water conservation instead of  through upgrading the grid, going to renewables, building out PV, doing smart  metering, just went in and spent money on water conservation, water use efficiency  metrics, you would have saved about the same amount that you saved from trying  to upgrade the grid. You would have done it at half the price almost and it  would have only cost you 12 cents per kilowatt hour instead of 22 cents per  kilowatt hour.” But we don’t think like that, right? The carbon goal has to come from the  energy sector. They never ask the people in the Department of Environment, can  you realize these carbon goals through water savings? And they spent all that  money and if they had done it through water use, they would have saved money  and they would have been better positioned for the drought. So we don’t think  about this nexus perspective from a government management at all in terms of  these resources and we’re often wasting a lot of money because we don’t think  about that nexus.
 
 
 “So, if I solve my water use  problem, it should also solve my energy problem, which will solve my climate  change problem. We need to think about when we’re pursuing these technologies  or these management strategies that we are winning and finding synergies. “   Very interesting indeed. We’ll note  that the UK’s Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) several years ago started rating  companies on practices related to “water security.”   It is clear water management and private  and public policies will do nothing but grow in importance.   What is your reaction to Dr. Zimmerman’s comments? Let us  know your thoughts at the Feedback button below. 
 
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