Who Owns the Rain?


When I was a kid, I remember helping my pops water the garden. He told me that he’d seen on the news that water was going to be the most expensive resource on earth. Eight-year-old me could not believe it! Water? But it comes from the sky! Well, I’m not sure what newscast pops was watching 22 years ago, but that report was pretty much spot on. With huge areas of the U.S. crippled by drought water is becoming more of a commodity than a right.

That distinction is the focus of The Water Front, a documentary about the residents of Highland Park, Michigan and their struggle to keep a handle on their water rights. Check out the trailer and more on the film after the jump!
L.A. residents are speaking out for sustainable water management at the March for Water on March 22nd.

Our water is being mismanaged. Without your voice, lawmakers and profiteers will continue to exploit the headlines and win corporate profits and political advantage.
You have two opportunities to join us and show your power. Start the march at 9AM or meet us for the noon celebration.
Organized by a wide coalition promoting responsible and sustainable water use, this march has broad support, but it won’t work without YOU.
They announced the march at a screening of FLOW - Irena Salina’s award-winning documentary about the world water crisis. Check out the trailer for FLOW:
According to Charity Water, one in six people on the planet do not have access to safe, clean drinking water.
Sometimes life imitates art. In Karen Dionne’s new thriller novel Freezing Point, melting icebergs are viewed as both the solution to the global water crisis and the source of man-made apocalyptic horror. In reality, giant melting icebergs raise global sea levels and unleash frozen methane gases into the Earth’s atmosphere.According to recently discovered NASA satellite data, more than 2 trillion tons of land ice in Greenland, Antarctica and Alaska have melted since 2003 and have caused alarming global climate changes.
So melting icebergs are not just the stuff of fiction. Yet, one hopes that what transpires in Freezing Point (think toxic drinking water, corporate monopolies of icebergs and large-scale eco-terrorism) never becomes reality.
In our conversation, Karen Dionne, who wrote a Huffington Post column titled “Can a Novel Change the World?”, spoke with me about the power of the written word, killer rats, and environmental activism:
How did you become interested in the global water crisis?
My interest in water issues goes back pretty far. My husband and I were part of the “back to land” movement in the ‘70s. We wanted to not be so dependent on the system, so we lived in nature, grew our own food, got our water from nearby wells. I remember reading the book Silent Spring and one thing I took away from it is that there is no pristine place left on earth. I learned that DDT was showing up in bird eggs and that toxins were everywhere. For my generation, it was an awakening of how severe the problem was. So I’ve always been concerned about what man is doing to the environment.
These facts may surprise you:
1.1 billion people live without clean drinking water.*
There are over 116,000 human-made chemicals that are finding their way into public
water supply systems.*
Water is a $400 billion dollar global industry; the third largest behind electricity and oil.*
Flow, a new film about the implications of the world water crisis, can help you wrap your head around those dismaying figures. The film, which opens tomorrow, investigates the growing privatization of the world’s dwindling fresh water supply with a careful attention to politics, pollution, human rights, and the emergence of a domineering world water cartel. Stories are told about how water has changed people’s lives and health, communities’ economies, and corporations’ bottom line. Throughout the film, we are asked to ponder “How did a handful of corporations steal our water?” and “Can anyone really own water?” For centuries water has been called “blue gold,” and after this film you will understand why.
Mark Twain once said, “Whiskey is for drinkin’, water is for fightin’ over.” In Irena Salina’s award-winning documentary, FLOW, which opens this Friday, the global battles to own, protect, and understand water are virtuously examined. Experts have labeled the world water crisis the most important political, social and environmental issue of the 21st Century, and with 3,900 children dying every day from water borne diseases caused by the lack of access to clean water, one can see why this is a critical issue.
In our conversation, Irena Salina shared her thoughts about the spiritual nature of water, the Earth’s fever, and what needs to be done to alleviate the crisis:
You spent five years making this film. Why do you think it’s so important for people to care about water?
The earth is made of almost 70 percent water, and we are made of almost 70 percent of it. Without it, we won’t exist. From the moment we are born, to when we are adults we are surrounded by water and it is one of the main things we need to live. And we need clean water because ever 8 seconds a child dies from diseases from unsanitary water. There is so much to water and most people don’t know about it.
Subscribe to our RSS feed or newsletter