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TheWaterChannel Podcast

TheWaterChannel Podcast

By TheWaterChannel

Podcast by TheWaterChannel Team
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Science, Policy & Groundwater in Colombia

TheWaterChannel PodcastJul 08, 2022

00:00
48:35
Water Harvesting for Community Resilience in Africa

Water Harvesting for Community Resilience in Africa

For thousand years, people have been benefiting from collecting, storing and making productive use of the rain, or water flows for their crops, animals, or for drinking. This smart idea still has all its beauty in today’s context. We talked to Dr. Yasir Mohamed (Sudan) and Prof. Pieter van der Zaag (IHE Delft, Netherlands) about how water harvesting helps building community resilience in Africa.

May 03, 202332:59
Turning Saltwater to Fresh - Story from Jordan

Turning Saltwater to Fresh - Story from Jordan

Jordan is also in the water world – it constantly ranks top 5 in the list of the most water-scarce nations of the world. Here, every single drop of water counts – in the most literal sense. We talk to researchers and a policy maker from Jordan, to have a peek into Jordan’s water challenges, and learn what it takes to fight water scarcity. Special thanks to the Water and Development Partnership Programme DUPC2, Dr. Muna Gharaibeh (Jordan Water Authority); Prof. Tariq Al-Najjar and Prof. Mohammad Wahsha (University of Jordan) and Prof. Maria Kennedy (IHE Delft) for the great support to this episode.

Mar 20, 202336:50
Understanding Pakistan Floods

Understanding Pakistan Floods

More than a third of Pakistan is under water since mid-June. The floods have left 1500 dead; more than 13,000 injured; 7.6 million displaced. Is this a freak hydrological event, or are we going to see more mega-floods in the future? To what extent are the floods an inevitable effect of climate change, and how much of the death and destruction was down to bad planning, preparedness, and water management? We discuss with Ilyas Masih and Micha Werner (IHE Delft Institute for Water Education, Netherlands) and Khurram Mubeen (MNS University- Multan, Pakistan).

Sep 30, 202248:39
Water, Peace, and Security

Water, Peace, and Security

We discuss with IHE Delft's Susanne Schmeier the interlinkages between Water and Peace, and whether conflict can be forecast using data and machine learning

Aug 22, 202223:38
Securing water for global south cities

Securing water for global south cities

Janez Susnik (IHE Delft) discusses ways to increase the self-reliance and sustainability of cities in the global South with regard to water supply by relieving pressure on traditional sources through the implementation of alternative water systems (for example rainwater harvesting, wastewater reuse, desalination)

Aug 15, 202233:37
Nile Diplomacy and the Nation-trap

Nile Diplomacy and the Nation-trap

The iconic Nile river flows through several countries who often stake competing claims to its waters. IHE-Delft's Emanuele Fantini discusses a project shows that the key to resolving disputes may lie in bringing together scientists, journalists, & artists in a way that dilutes the imperative to look at the the Nile from the perspective of nation-states

Aug 10, 202241:14
What went wrong with organic agriculture in Sri Lanka?

What went wrong with organic agriculture in Sri Lanka?

Sri Lanka is going through an economic, political crisis. Many associate the island nation's slide to its decision to allow only organic agriculture, in April 2021. Senior agronomist C.M. Wijayaratna explains that this had more to do with the rushed manner of its implementation, and what a pathway out of this crisis could look like
Jul 28, 202226:16
Science, Policy, and Water in The Netherlands

Science, Policy, and Water in The Netherlands

We speak to Martijn van Staveren (IHP-HWRP Committee on Water)on how water science informs water policy, in The Netherlands and beyond.
Jul 14, 202223:08
Science, Policy & Groundwater in Colombia
Jul 08, 202248:35
Managing Water with Data: Satellites, Remote Sensing, and the value chain of Open Data

Managing Water with Data: Satellites, Remote Sensing, and the value chain of Open Data

Monitoring and managing of water resources is increasingly being done remotely-- using data collected from satellites and drones . Ground level monitoring is often done in ways that involves generation, consolidation, and analysis of vast amounts of data.
What goes on behind this technology? To what extent does all this technology, all this data reach people doing water management on the ground? And how should we treat the vast amounts of data being generated about natural resources that impact us all— who owns it? Who should have access to it? What way of managing it would stimulate most innovation?
May 25, 202241:31
Groundwater: Invisible yet Indispensable

Groundwater: Invisible yet Indispensable

Groundwater lies literally buried under layers of soil and rock. It is therefore difficult to monitor, manage, and govern. At the same time, it is a crucial resource: it makes for 98% of all available freshwater on the planet, 50% of all drinking water, 40% of all irrigation water, a third of all water used in industry. In the ongoing Year of Groundwater (2022), an international effort is underway to put groundwater front and centre of policy, research, and practice, to achieve much needed improvement in management and governance of this crucial resource globally.
May 19, 202226:27
Netherlands: Delta Leader to Delta Friend?

Netherlands: Delta Leader to Delta Friend?

'Deltas' are landmasses formed out of sediments deposited by rivers at their mouth. Throughout human history, deltas have been cradles of important ports, great cities, key industry, and agriculture.
Deltas are fragile ecosystems; managing them demands much diligence and expertise. Over centuries, The Netherlands has built a reputation of being a key repository of such expertise. It has gone out into the world and offered this expertise to other delta countries; this has been a cornerstone of its diplomacy, trade, and aid.
In this episode, Delta management expert Shanoor Hasan discusses what constitutes 'Brand Netherlands' when it comes to Delta management, and makes a case as to how/why it needs to change.
Apr 06, 202237:41
Agriculture's Rodent Problem

Agriculture's Rodent Problem

Even as we tackle droughts, famines, and the need to boost food security for millions, 15% of all food that we grow is being eaten up by rodents (rats, mice, and such). In Sub-Saharan Africa, this figure shoots up to 24%. In Ethiopia, this goes up further--46%--almost half of all the food grown. What is being done to eliminate this gaping hole in our food basket? What can be done further?
Mar 18, 202252:54
Pastoralism in Somaliland

Pastoralism in Somaliland

We talk to Welt Hunger Hilfe's Thomas Hoerz, on how Somaliland is different than Somalia, how pastoralism sustains millions in arid areas, and how investing in these areas could be key to large-scale carbon sequestration.
Mar 15, 202250:22
Small islands in big oceans
Feb 09, 202237:15
Circular Economy

Circular Economy

We speak to Dr. Kamonashish Haldar (Wageningen University) about 'Circular Economy,' a model of production and consumption that involves sharing, leasing, refurbishing, and recycling of materials and products. This is not just an ethical choice - in the current scenario of scarce resources and environmental degradation, it also makes good business sense.
Feb 09, 202229:03
How organic is agriculture in India?
Jan 19, 202236:46
Life at the climate forefront: The Sundarbans through photos
Dec 20, 202128:36
Toilets in Refugee Camps: Tineke Hooijmans, IHE Delft

Toilets in Refugee Camps: Tineke Hooijmans, IHE Delft

Globally, nearly 7 million people live in refugee camps. Refugee camps are temporary facilities for people on the move, and are built as such-- tents, prefab material, communal taps, and so forth. What about toilets? How does one design, operate, and maintain systems that can catch, store, and treat the vast quantities of poop and piss produced by a dense community.... which is formed quickly and grows rapidly?
Tineke Hooijmans, Assistant Professor in Sanitary Engineering (IHE Delft, The Netherlands)explains the difficulties of this task, and the state of sanitation in refugee camps across the world.
Dec 20, 202133:38
Rivers Remember: How the 2015 floods changed Chennai
Nov 30, 202140:44
The women, the land, & the virus: COVID19 impact on smallholder farmers

The women, the land, & the virus: COVID19 impact on smallholder farmers

In this first episode of TheWaterChannel podcast, we discuss how the #COVID19 pandemic affected smallholder farmers. We speak to a group of researchers who studied the pandemic’s impact on smallholder farmers in India, Algeria, and Morocco: Irene Leonardelli (IHE Delft, The Netherlands), Lisa Bossenbroek (University of Koblenz-Landau, Germanya), Hind Ftouhi (Hassan IIInstitute of Agronomy and Veterinary Medicine, Morocco), Sneha Bhat (SOPPECOM, India), and Meriem F. Hamamouche (Bureau d'Etudes, Consulting dans le domaine Agricole).
May 17, 202142:04