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5 votes
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Emergency measures needed to rescue Great Salt Lake from ongoing collapse
15 votes -
Disaster scenarios raise the stakes for Colorado River negotiations
6 votes -
RO Filter, Tap Filter and TDS Meter: Three must haves if you stay in bore well water areas
1 vote -
Cheap, renewable, clean energy. There's just one problem.
5 votes -
How long would society last during a total grid collapse?
4 votes -
Helsinki is tapping an unexpected source of energy to heat its homes – cold water extracted from deep in the Baltic Sea
6 votes -
California approves large, controversial desalination plant for Monterey Peninsula
9 votes -
Paris has pledged to make the Seine swimmable by the 2024 Summer Olympics, investing in a $1.6 billion stormwater holding tank to curb sewage pollution
11 votes -
Corpus Christi sold its water to Exxon, gambling on desalination. So far, it is losing the bet.
11 votes -
Mississippi River levels are dropping too low for barges to float
3 votes -
UN mulls quick foreign troop deployment to ease Haiti crisis
5 votes -
‘A profound betrayal of trust’: Why Jackson’s water system is broken
8 votes -
Clues to the near-future behaviour of a warming Greenland, and perhaps even a warming Antarctic, buried under the North Sea
5 votes -
Lithium removal with household water purification devices
5 votes -
How San Francisco’s recycled water program stumbled into performative environmentalism
4 votes -
California’s drought regulators lose big case. What it means for state’s power to police water
9 votes -
Meltwater from Greenland's ice sheet is loaded with the right kind of sand for concrete production – which further warms the planet
4 votes -
The grass is always browner – Swedish neighbours vie for 'ugliest lawn' title on the island of Gotland
7 votes -
Why the US Army electrifies this water
7 votes -
Arizona farmers grew Saudi Arabia's agriculture empire. Now, the monarchy has a chunk of the state's water.
8 votes -
Poland: ‘Huge’ amounts of chemical waste dumped into river
8 votes -
British consumers could face even higher bills and potential energy shortages as Norway threatens electricity export cut
9 votes -
Polio found in New York wastewater as state urges vaccinations
9 votes -
A geyser that shoots sparkling mineral water
7 votes -
Kayaking the sickest urban river in Australia
5 votes -
Greenland ice sheet saw a sharp spike in the rate and extent of melting last week – eighteen billion tons of water in just three days
8 votes -
Rio Grande runs dry in Albuquerque for the first time in forty years
9 votes -
Hard water solutions?
I recently moved to a place with harder water than I'm used to (more minerals). It tastes bad, it makes my detergents less effective, it forms soap scum everywhere, and it's definitely not good...
I recently moved to a place with harder water than I'm used to (more minerals). It tastes bad, it makes my detergents less effective, it forms soap scum everywhere, and it's definitely not good for my appliances. Does anyone have advice on how to deal with this in a cost-effective way?
I unfortunately can't install a point-of-entry water softener here. I can theoretically install point-of-use softeners for each of my appliances (bathroom sink, kitchen sink, dishwasher, washing machine, maybe shower), but the portable ones cost like $300+. I can't decide if it's worth the purchase. I also don't know enough about the different kinds or whether they're available in portable formats (reverse osmosis filtration, potassium chloride water softening, and sodium water softening; maybe others). Does anyone have recommendations?
I recently bought a showerhead with a better filter, which will probably help reduce skin irritation, but it can't actually remove calcium or magnesium. I can't visualize what a genuine point-of-use softener for a shower would even look like or how I would attach it to my showerhead, and I don't know where to get one that isn't just marketing fluff.
I have some CLR that I intend to use with my dishwasher, but I don't want to have to buy this stuff constantly (just another cleaning product in my cabinet). And I have a Brita for drinking water, but was thinking of getting an under-sink filter as I don't like waiting for it to refill; I have no idea how much to spend on this or which brands are best.
Happy to hear everyone's thoughts on household water management!
9 votes -
NASA scientists to study ice, snow and melt ponds in the Arctic Ocean during the warmer summer months to better understand melting sea ice
4 votes -
Controversy continues over whether hot water freezes faster than cold
7 votes -
How people live off a garbage mountain that keeps catching on fire | World Wide Waste
2 votes -
Isolated group of polar bears found surviving in south-east Greenland thanks to freshwater discharge from glaciers
10 votes -
California imposes sweeping ban on pumping river water in San Joaquin Valley, Bay Area
11 votes -
Going nuclear to desalinate seawater
5 votes -
How we track COVID-19 (and other weird stuff) in sewage
8 votes -
Nurdles: The massive, unregulated source of plastic pollution you’ve probably never heard of
10 votes -
Californian critics blast Poseidon desalination plan as crucial vote looms
4 votes -
The strange appeal of garden lawns
10 votes -
'Unprecedented' water restrictions ordered for millions in Southern California
17 votes -
Bilge dumping: The worst pollution you've never heard of
5 votes -
Resemblance between features on Europa's frozen surface and landform in Greenland provide new indications moon may be capable of harboring life
5 votes -
As the world experiences sea level rise, Iceland's waters are falling – and flowing to the other side of the planet
6 votes -
A major update in our assessment of water quality interventions
5 votes -
California pumps too much groundwater, especially during droughts. Now, it's learning to refill the overdrawn bucket.
9 votes -
The big semiconductor water problem
12 votes -
The future of sea level rise is being written underneath Antarctica and Greenland
4 votes -
Disney to build a branded community promising “magic” in the California desert
7 votes -
Can you pump sewage? When it comes to wastewater, what goes down must come up again
1 vote -
A 'blue blob' in the North Atlantic Ocean has been slowing down the melting of Iceland's glaciers, a new study suggests
6 votes