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Natural Awakenings Twin Cities October 2021

Read the October 2021 edition of Natural Awakenings Twin Cities magazine. This is our annual Healthy Planet Issue which is focused on Living a Simpler Lifestyle and Breast Health. Topics also include the fall fruit recipes, water scarcity, tips on grieving, talking with your children about climate change, cannabis for your pets and so much more! Be sure to check out our local content including News Briefs announcements, Community Resource Guide with providers throughout the metro who can meet your individual wellness needs, and all the happenings in the Calendar of Events. There is additional online-only content that can be found at NATwinCities.com. While you are there, be sure to sign up for our Newsletter and Digital Magazine and continue your reading with our archived articles from local experts.

Read the October 2021 edition of Natural Awakenings Twin Cities magazine. This is our annual Healthy Planet Issue which is focused on Living a Simpler Lifestyle and Breast Health. Topics also include the fall fruit recipes, water scarcity, tips on grieving, talking with your children about climate change, cannabis for your pets and so much more!

Be sure to check out our local content including News Briefs announcements, Community Resource Guide with providers throughout the metro who can meet your individual wellness needs, and all the happenings in the Calendar of Events. There is additional online-only content that can be found at NATwinCities.com.

While you are there, be sure to sign up for our Newsletter and Digital Magazine and continue your reading with our archived articles from local experts.

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green living<br />

Water Scarcity Woes<br />

A Global Problem That’s Getting Worse<br />

by Jeremiah Castelo<br />

Water scarcity is a legitimate concern.<br />

It is true that the hydrologic cycle, the process in which<br />

the Earth circulates water throughout its ecosystems, is<br />

a closed-loop cycle that neither adds nor takes away water. In<br />

theory, the amount of water on Earth will always remain<br />

the same. But problems occur when the hydrologic<br />

cycle is disrupted, causing some regions to grow<br />

arid while others get constant floods. The<br />

human activities that disrupt that process<br />

include the building of dams, the<br />

industrial pollution of waterways, the<br />

paving of roads, excessive drilling<br />

and bottled water privatization.<br />

Here are 10 of the most alarming<br />

water scarcity facts that the<br />

world is currently facing.<br />

By 2025, half of the<br />

world’s population will be<br />

living in areas of water stress<br />

as people will be unable to<br />

access the water they need.<br />

Climate change, population<br />

growth, agricultural demands<br />

and mismanagement of water<br />

resources all contribute to the<br />

growing water crisis.<br />

den VIII/AdobeStock.com<br />

24 <strong>Twin</strong> <strong>Cities</strong> Edition NAtwincities.com<br />

The world’s population will<br />

rise to 9.7 billion by 2050, leaving<br />

even more people in water-stressed<br />

conditions. An estimated 60 percent<br />

of all surface water on Earth comes from<br />

river basins shared by separate nations and<br />

almost 600 aquifers cross national boundaries. In<br />

places where water is already scarce, this can lead to<br />

geopolitical conflict.<br />

Three in 10 people on Earth currently do not have access to<br />

safe and clean water. According to the World Health Organization, 2.1 billion<br />

people do not have access to a safely managed water source. An estimated 263 million<br />

people must travel over 30 minutes to access water that isn’t clean, and 159 million still<br />

drink from untreated surface water sources.

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