Local News
Advice puts Eel River diversion plan on shelf
March, 2008: A recently revived proposal to divert water from a protected portion of the Eel River near Dos Rios has been quietly shelved following a negative legal opinion.
Diverting water from a Wild & Scenic River?
October, 2007: Mendocino County studies a plan to divert water from the Wild & Scenic Eel River. If they succeed, the Wild & Scenic Gualala River would also be threatened.
Bottled Water
Quick facts about bottled water versus
cleaning up the drinking water supply
- Members of the United Nations estimate that if the world took half of what it currently spends on bottled water ($100 billion annually) and invested it in water infrastructure and treatment, everyone in the world could have access to clean drinking water.
- But bottled water is cleaner, right? Actually, the U.S. EPA sets more stringent quality standards for tap water than the FDA does for bottled beverages, and roughly 40% of bottled water is actually just tap water.
- 1.5 billion barrels of oil are consumed each year to produce the plastic for water bottles, enough to fuel 100,000 cars.
- According to the Container Recycling Institute, only 14 percent of plastic water bottles are recycled.
- A water bottle in a landfill or lying around as litter will take over 1,000 years to biodegrade.
More info:
organicconsumers.org/foodsafety/Bottled020606.cfm
Waterbag Campaign
In 2002, Friends of the Gualala River played a leading role in opposing a scheme to export water from the Gualala River to southern California in giant floating plastic “waterbags.”
See a detailed account of our successful campaign to prevent the harm the waterbag scheme would have caused to our river and our community.
![](https://gualalariver.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/gualala_estuary_2002_01.jpg)
Gualala River estuary in winter
photo courtesy of P.T. Nunn, 2002