Inter Press Service: As water resources in Southern Africa come under pressure from growing population, climate change and increasing industrial and agricultural use, economic accounting for water is among the tools that could aid better management.
"Economic accounting for water - EAW - is a process of systematically measuring the contribution of water to the economy as well as the impact of economic activity such as agriculture, mining, and industry on water resources through abstraction and pollution," explains......
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Assessing the true value of water
Posted by Washington Post: Juliet Eilperin on April 3rd, 2011
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