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Latin America News - Rainwater Harvesting

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|style="background:#efefef;"|[[Image:latin america news rwh.png|left|70px|link=Alstom Foundation will finance 9 projects in Latin America]]
|February 2016 <br> [[Alstom Foundation will finance 9 projects in Latin America]] <br> ''The Alstom Foundation will support 18 new projects worldwide this year. Among them, 50% are in Latin America, in countries as Argentina, Ecuador, Mexico, Panama, Peru and Venezuela.''
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|style="background:#efefef;"|[[Image:latin america news rwh.png|left|70px|link=Rainwater Harvesting in São Paulo, Brazil]]
|November 13, 2015 <br> [[Rainwater Harvesting in São Paulo, Brazil]] <br> ''São Paulo is a city suffering from a chronic water crisis, what some are calling “hydric collapse” as the city experiences a record three year low in rainfall, with 2014 being a record-breaking drought. And due to deforestation around the city, when it does rain, it can turn into violent torrents that end up not filling reservoirs but causing other problems. This has made life for people in the city extremely difficult.''
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|style="background:#efefef;"|[[Image:latin america news rwh.png|left|70px|link=Going local to solve Mexico City's water crisis]]
|October 20, 2015 <br> [[Going local to solve Mexico City's water crisis]] <br> ''Mexico City's creaking water infrastructure is a public health hazard and environmental disaster. Flooding and water shortages are commonplace. But grassroots movements are harnessing rainwater to ease the crisis.''
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|style="background:#efefef;"|[[Image:latin america news rwh.png|left|70px|link=This Water-Harvesting Billboard Doubles As An Urban Farm]]
|April 14, 2015 <br> [[This Water-Harvesting Billboard Doubles As An Urban Farm]] <br> ''When city soil is too polluted to grow fresh vegetables, there may be another way to practice urban farming: Build a hydroponic greenhouse on a billboard. In Lima, Peru, an experimental billboard sucks humidity out of the air to water plants through system of drip-irrigated pipes, making it possible to grow thousands of heads of lettuce in a week.''
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|style="background:#efefef;"|[[Image:latin america news rwh.png|left|70px|link=Amazonian Tribes Try Harvesting Rainwater After Oil Drilling Polluted Their Water]]
|May 31, 2012 <br> [[Amazonian Tribes Try Harvesting Rainwater After Oil Drilling Polluted Their Water]] <br> ''The drilling operations [of oil companies] were pouring pollution in the area’s air and water—so much pollution that last year an Ecuadorian judge ordered Chevron to pay a total $18 billion to a group of 30,000 indigenous people, represented by a coalition of lawyers from Ecuador and North America. ''
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