Guest post by Jeff Mosenkis of Innovations for Poverty Action.
A quick housekeeping item, if you haven’t seen. Chris migrated his site to new servers so had some downtime this week, but all the content should be back up by now. They’re still getting SSL set up so your browser may warn you that you’re not reading in https yet (so don’t enter your credit card information into the comments till that’s squared away).
- Jobs:
- Hewlett Foundation Program Officer, Global Development and Population Program
- Gates Foundation Program Officer, Digital Financial Services Research – FSP (Financial Services for the Poor)
- U.S. gov’s Office of Evaluation Sciences (sometimes known as our Nudge Unit) one-year fellowship (deadline Sunday).
- A really interesting feature story and blog posts from the New York Times about towns in Mexico, tired of gangs and ineffective or corrupt police, who are taking it upon themselves to organize their own security. Sometimes it’s the town, sometimes it’s the business interests. The authors point to the feel-good story of avocado growers hiring private security forces to expel the gangs and provide security, but point out that another word for monied interests with private security forces running their own mini-state could be “warlord.”
- In Mexico avocados might rule, but a paper argues that the origins of the Sicilian Mafia lie in actual markets for lemons. The state was weak in the 18th century, and the sudden discovery that citrus fruits could cure scurvy resulted in a sudden spike in demand for the lemons and oranges produced in Sicily. Using data from an 1880’s parliamentary inquiry, Dimico, Isopi, and Olsson find stronger mafia presences in areas where citrus fruit was being grown for export. (h/t Jennifer Doleac/Scott Cunningham)
- Cape Town may be the first major city to run out of water. The city projects it will run out around April 21, and are rationing users, whom the city is not happy with:
“It is quite unbelievable that a majority of people do not seem to care and are sending all of us headlong towards Day Zero,” the city’s media office said in a statement. Many of the city’s four million residents are “callously” using too much water, it said.
- Egypt and Ethiopia are also fighting over the Nile, which Ethiopia dams for electricity, but supplies almost all of Egypt’s water.
- These kinds of disputes happen in the U.S. as well, with Florida and Georgia going to the Supreme Court a few weeks ago, and a Wisconsin city getting in trouble with five Great Lakes states over taking water from Lake Michigan. And of course everybody in the West and the Colorado River.
- Today on Marginal Revolution, Tyler Cowen points to Israel, a mostly desert country, which managed to solve its water crisis a number of years ago with a combination of technology and policies. Cowen asks whether California is listening, which it is, learning from Israeli water officials. But one warned about something we see a lot in development: people want to flock to flashy technology solutions like desalinating ocean water, but the biggest solutions are usually very boring and old-fashioned:
- These kinds of disputes happen in the U.S. as well, with Florida and Georgia going to the Supreme Court a few weeks ago, and a Wisconsin city getting in trouble with five Great Lakes states over taking water from Lake Michigan. And of course everybody in the West and the Colorado River.
Desalination is seen by some as a magic bullet, the shield that saved Israel from the whims of nature. But Avrahm Tenne, head of desalination at Israel’s water authority, says surpluses don’t start with huge desalination plants.
“Desalinization is not the first step that you are doing. It’s probably the last step,” Tenne says.
Israel has invested in repairing leaking pipes, run ad campaigns promoting conservation and built a separate water industry around recycling sewage water. Eighty-six percent is now recycled, he said, providing farmers half of their annual need.
- A friend who works in water policy is also a bit down on how hard it is to get people to pay attention to smart water policy here – much like Cape Town officials complain, it seems people don’t care until there’s a crisis.
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- Side note: when I was shopping for toilets, I was dumbfounded by how annoying it is to get a dual-flush toilet in the U.S. They’re available, usually at the same cost, but typically not displayed in stores. An incredibly easy win in the millions of gallons would be just having stores display them so people know they’re an option.
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And Namibia is trying to cash in on Trump’s Africa remarks (language warning for the first video below):
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3 Responses
A friend who works in water policy is also a bit down on how hard it is to get people to pay attention to smart water policy here – much like Cape Town officials complain, it seems people don’t care until there’s a crisis.
golu dolls
golu dolls
This blog presents an interesting perspective on how Israel solved its water crisis. An alternative historical perspective can be found via the BBC: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-11101797 The current reality of the impact of the occupation of Palestine on water rights can be found here: http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2016/06/israel-water-tool-dominate-palestinians-160619062531348.html It would seem that Israel’s solution is closely tied to settlement occupation. I am not sure that anyone would want to recommend this as a development approach.
thank you for posting this!