This book is a must-read book from a renowned environmental writer about one of our most precious natural resources."Great Lakes for Sale" is a book for anyone interested in saving the Great Lakes, a huge fresh-water system that contains an estimated 6 quadrillion gallons of water and about twenty percent of the world's fresh surface water. The book poses - and answers - important questions about the export and diversion of Great Lakes water. Not only does "Great Lakes for Sale" examine past and present water-diversion ...
Read More
This book is a must-read book from a renowned environmental writer about one of our most precious natural resources."Great Lakes for Sale" is a book for anyone interested in saving the Great Lakes, a huge fresh-water system that contains an estimated 6 quadrillion gallons of water and about twenty percent of the world's fresh surface water. The book poses - and answers - important questions about the export and diversion of Great Lakes water. Not only does "Great Lakes for Sale" examine past and present water-diversion practices; it also shows readers what they can do to save this natural resource.It's difficult to understate the importance of the Great Lakes water system - economically, environmentally, or from a public-health perspective. The Great Lakes support year-round sport fishery, they provide a route for commercial and recreational navigation, and they supply many communities with drinking water. Water means jobs and life in the Great Lakes region. And, while residents of this huge region revel in a seemingly limitless quantity of fresh water today, it's likely that the future will see that same fresh water grow ever more scarce as well as become a source of contention between thirsty communities - and corporations - further afield and those who live in this giant watershed."Great Lakes for Sale" is an important part of the effort to remind people why commercialization of Great Lakes water is a dangerous threat. It's not simply a matter of how much water in the short term is removed; the long-term threat is control of water and the possibility that non-Great Lakes interests will assert ownership of the very substance of the Great Lakes.
Read Less