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Sydney water utility wins international prize

by Staff Writers
Stockholm (AFP) May 24, 2006
The largest water utility in Australia, the driest continent in the world, received an international prize Wednesday for an innovative conservation scheme that has saved 20 million liters of water per day.

The Sydney Water Corporation was awarded the 2006 Stockholm Industry Water Prize for its "Every Drop Counts (EDC) Business Program," which tackles the problem of water management "as a business issue rather than a technical issue," the International Water Institute said in announcing the prize.

Since 2001 more than 310 organizations have joined the Sydney program, achieving daily water savings equivalent to 20 Olympic pools.

Founded in 2000 by the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences, the prize is jointly awarded by the Academy and the Global Water Partnership, International Water Association, Stockholm Water Foundation, World Business Council for Sustainable Development as well as leading academics of water sciences.

It will be presented in Stockholm during the 2006 World Water Week in August.

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Nanotube Membranes Offer Possibility Of Cheaper Desalination
Livermore CA (SPX) May 22, 2006
A nanotube membrane on a silicon chip the size of a quarter may offer a cheaper way to remove salt from water. Researchers at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory have created a membrane made of carbon nanotubes and silicon that may offer, among many possible applications, a less expensive desalinization.







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