September 19, 2006 – Volume 10, Issue 12
I N · T H I S · I S S U E
FLANIGAN'S ECO-LOGIC
Balancing Urban Water Thirst
So just where does the water come from that you drink? Your own well or spring? A municipal system? Close by or far away? If you live in Los Angeles or San Francisco, part of your water comes from snow melt in Yosemite National Park. In New York, the Catskills provide significant water for the city. Urban areas look to the hinterland for supplies, for centuries building impressive aqueducts.
This past week I had the good fortune to examine the Los Angeles Aqueduct from one end to the other. The three-day Los Angeles Department of Water and Power tour provided an in-depth perspective of the remarkable Owens River Valley water diversion project that enabled the development of Los Angeles. Despite historic controversy about local impacts, the aqueduct is an engineering marvel. Its 338-mile system of rivers, reservoirs, open channels, and massive steel pipes is completely gravity-based with its falling water generating more than 100 MW along its day-long route.
For many years, activists have been outraged by the City’s “water grab” and clandestine purchases of Owens Valley ranches and their water rights. Today, the City of Los Angeles owns an area in the Owens Valley as large as the City’s 464 square miles. And while it has tried to be a good neighbor, its imprint on the local environment and economy is clear.
The City formed Los Angeles Department of Water and Power in 1902 to begin construction of the 233- mile Los Angeles Aqueduct to the Owens River Valley. It was completed in 1913, then extended 105 miles north to the Mono Basin in the 1940s. Before long, the Owens Lake became a dry bed lake, and Mono Lake’s water level was dropping 3-4 feet a year. While few people live in the Owens and Mono basins, by all accounts, the local ecosystem was in peril and the local way of life was out of balance.
Law suits ensued, and finally – after a century of conflict and decades of litigation – in the 1990s sweeping settlements were reached that seek to balance local use and exports to Los Angeles. At Mono Lake, the parties have agreed to a water level that protects the local ecology, attempting a balance between the thirst of millions and the environmental and local economic sanctity. Owens Lake is being “re-watered.”
For over 100 years, LA has benefited from water resources from the Owens River Valley; for nearly 60 years it has drawn water from the Mono Lake Basin. Today, that tradition continues, but in far greater balance with local conditions. For the City it means less water, more conservation, and more expensive and lower quality “make-up” water purchases. Los Angeles leaders and citizens have risen to the challenge of finding a greater balance in the Mono and Owens valleys, sending a message that consumers now bear ever-truer costs as previous externalities are internalized in the costs of water.
Organic Farming Majors
Two universities – Washington State University and the University of Florida (UF) – have announced new organic agriculture majors. "The organic-food industry is maturing," said Mickie Swisher, co-director of UF's Center for Organic Agriculture. The creation of an organic major has at least two effects: There will be more trained organic farmers going back to the land or working for major agribusinesses, and UF faculty will be conducting more research on organic farming methods and practices. While these professors before might have studied use of chemical pesticides and herbicides to increase crop yield, or more "efficient" means of raising livestock, researchers will now take on research projects on subjects such as organic weed control.
LivingHomes Hits Platinum
LivingHomes has received the highest rating possible from the pilot LEED® for Homes rating system. It’s the first residential project in the country to attain a Platinum rating while being the first company to make LEED certified prefab homes available for consumers nationwide. The LivingHomes model home – located in Santa Monica, California -- is a Zero Energy, Zero Water, Zero Waste, Zero Carbon, Zero Emissions residence.
The LivingHomes’ model home demonstrates that sustainable design helps lower operating costs, increase home value, reduce maintenance issues, and improve indoor environmental quality in the long- term. Since the LEED program’s inception in 2000, a total of 550 buildings have been certified nationwide and only 20 have achieved Platinum. The LivingHomes model home was awarded a total of 91 points out of 108.
The home is anticipated to be 80% more efficient than a conventional residence of similar size. The majority of the home’s energy will be produced by photovoltaics. Sustainable features include solar water heating and radiant floors, a native landscape and rooftop garden to divert storm-water and alleviate the heat island effect of conventional black roofs; LED lights; and a 3,500-gallon cistern and grey water recycling system to divert sink and shower water for irrigation. The model home features an indoor garden filled with plants that filter indoor pollutants and are prolific oxygen creators. In order to make the homes carbon-neutral, LivingHomes pays for a carbon off-set for each home it sells as well as first year operation. For more info, go to the LivingHomes website.