Buy Used
Used - Good See details
Price: £3.03

or
Sign in to turn on 1-Click ordering.
 
   
Have one to sell? Sell yours here
When The Rivers Run Dry: What Happens When Our Water Runs Out?
 
See larger image
 
Tell the Publisher!
I’d like to read this book on Kindle

Don't have a Kindle? Get your Kindle here, or download a FREE Kindle Reading App.

When The Rivers Run Dry: What Happens When Our Water Runs Out? [Illustrated] [Hardcover]

Fred Pearce , Key Porter Books Limited
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)

Available from these sellers.


‹  Return to Product Overview

Product Description

Review

"Fred Pearce is an artist with a pen, writing beautifully and movingly about an emerging crisis that will galvanize the world's attention." - James Speth, ex head of blue-chip World Resources Institute and the UN Development Programme, and now dean of Yale School of Environmental Studies:"

Tim Smit, The Eden Project

If ever a book has been written that demands to be read it is this one.

Robin McKie, The Observer, Feb 26 2006

Environmental journalist Fred Pearce's book, When the Rivers Run Dry could not be better timed

Jai Singh, San Francisco Chronicle

Those who...take Pearce's tour through the global water crisis will be treated to an enriching and farsighted work

Book Description

Fred Pearce has travelled the World to provide the most complete portrait yet of the causes of the world water crisis - THE resource crisis for the 21st century. Calling for a 'blue revolution' , he finds new solutions that will surprise most readers.

Mick Herron, The Geographical Magazine

It's time to face up to consequences of our actions. Reading this alarming book is a good place to start.

Culture (supp. to the Sunday Times)

Unblinking look at the growing water crisis, both here and abroad.

Sandra L. Postel, Science

Pearce provides a compelling compendium of place-based water
stories that reveal just how ground-shifting the world's water predicament
will be.

The Sunday Times

More evangelist than doomsayer...Pearce illuminates the folly of
trying to control a natural force with concrete and steel.

From the Inside Flap

Few of us take the trouble to consider how much water we use. We drink no more than 5 litres each in a day and even after washing and flushing toilets we consume only 150 litres; but it can take as much as 5000 litres to grow just one kilo of rice; 11000 litres to feed enough cow to make a quarter-pound burger; and you could fill 25 baths with the water it takes to grow the cotton for a T-shirt. In such ways we consume a hundred times our own weight in water every day. But the world is running out of water. Some of our largest rivers now trickle into sand miles from the ocean, exhausted by human need. Even in the downs of lowland England, rivers and streams are drying up as we pump water from the hills where they once sprung. And it is not just the rivers. The wells are drying up too. Across the world, ancient reserves of underground water are being emptied and most of them will never naturally refill. By 2025 three billion people will face chronic water shortages and the spectre of water wars looms. Water is ‘the new oil’ – except we can live without oil; there are no alternatives to fresh water. Fred Pearce has travelled all over the world preparing the most complete portrait yet of the growing world water crisis. He explores its complex origins, from waste to wrong-headed engineering projects to high-yield crop varieties that saved a generation from famine but are now draining the earth dry. His vivid reportage reveals the personal stories behind failing rivers, barren fields, desertification, floods, water wars, and even the death of cultures. Is there hope? Yes – but only if we revolutionize the way we treat water. Terrifying about the consequences if governments fail to act, yet ultimately forward-thinking and inspiring, this phenomenally important book shows us just how essential it is that each of us take responsibility for the water we use now - before all our rivers run dry.

About the Author

Fred Pearce was born and educated in the UK He studied Geography at Cambridge University and has since reported on environment, science and development issues from 54 countries. He is a regular broadcaster on radio and TV, with interview credits from Today to Richard and Judy to the Open University. Fred lives in London. "Fred Pearce is an artist with a pen, writing beautifully and movingly about an emerging crisis that will galvanize the world's attention." - James Speth, ex head of blue-chip World Resources Institute and the UN Development Programme, and now dean of Yale School of Environmental Studies:
‹  Return to Product Overview