September 19, 2008
Scientist addresses Nature Conservancy
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During his presentation Thursday evening, Sanjayan focused on efforts the conservancy has made toward water conservation.

He spoke about a recent trip to Namibia in which he and a group of scientist walked across the Namib Desert.

A feat that took 15 days and six camels, he said.

The group had started out with nine, but a lion ate one camel, one became hobbled and another became pregnant.

During their trek, he said each member of the group used 15 liters of water a day.

He compared that to the 30 liters of water an average woman in Ghana uses a day, to the 200 liters a person in Germany uses and the 600 liters a person in the U.S. uses per day.

Water is a basic need that people across the world rely on to sustain themselves.

Waterborne diseases are also the number one cause of childhood deaths, of which 90 percent are preventable, Sanjayan said.  The death rate is equivalent to a 747 passenger jet full of children crashing 10 times a day, he said.

On a more local level, Sonjayan also spoke about efforts the conservancy has made in the Flint River in Georgia to reduce the amount of water farmers require.

By developing a sensor that monitors soil dampness, farmers have reduced their water consumption from the Flint River by 17 percent over four years, he said.

"That's the equivalent to the amount of water 250,000 people in Atlanta use," he said.

"We all contribute to the problem and we are all part of the solution," he said.

Reach Veronica Nett at veroni...@wvgazette.com or 348-5113.

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Posted By: Anonymous (10:59am 09-19-2008)
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Below, another example of West Virginians who do not want clean energy.

Posted By: Anonymous (10:13am 09-19-2008)
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I am really sick of hearing about wind turbines. They are not the answer to mountain top removal. All of those touting them as the saving grace of southern west virginia need to really do some research and learn what they are talking about. Furthermore, let Indiana and Illinois build them there and all the others that WV's coal produces electricity for. Don't heap anymore scars on our mountains. Quite frankly tearing up the top of the mountain is not different regardless of who is doing it.

Posted By: phixer (4:35am 09-19-2008)
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The Nature Conservancy: don't let the article fool you into thinking there was any serious talk about alternative energy. The Nature Conservancy is working with other groups in states to oppose wind farms, the thing that some recent discussions here have called for building (again, only on land the landowner wants Massey to mine).

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