Topic: water quality

Aqueduct provides companies with comprehensive, high-resolution picture of water risks worldwide.

ADVISORY: WRI Experts to Speak at Annual Conference on Ecosystem Services in Ft Lauderdale

Experts from the World Resources Institute will be joining leaders from business, government, and environment communities at the annual [ACES and Ecosystems Markets 2012 Summit]

Shale gas production is changing the global energy picture. WRI analysis is helping to clarify the challenges and opportunities of this complex energy source.

A global initiative to advance the progress of building environmentally sustainable and livable cities in China, India, and Brazil.

Experts and innovators meet to chart the future of ecosystem conservation

This post originally appeared on The Asia Water Project website, and is reposted with permission.

These tables serve as a reference document containing the key design elements of nutrient trading programs in four Chesapeake Bay states: Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and West Virginia.

WRI identifies 13 new eutrophic areas around the world.

When it comes to providing clean water, investments in forest conservation can save money.

The issue brief provides an overview of how businesses and water utilities in the United States and Latin America are pursuing upstream forest conservation as a cost-effective means of ensuring clean water supplies. It also suggests how many of these approaches could be applicable in the southern United States.

In the Southern United States, the watersheds with the greatest ability to produce clean water and with the most consumers tend to be the forested watersheds of the east (top).

Many payments for watershed services share a common trait: they are investments in “green infrastructure” instead of “gray infrastructure.” In other words, they are investments in forests i

Coral reefs are classified by estimated present threat from watershed-based pollution, which threatens more than 25 percent of reefs globally.

Coral reefs are classified by estimated present threat from marine-based pollution and damage, which threatens approximately 10 percent of reefs globally.

New Web-Based Map Tracks Marine "Dead Zones" Worldwide

Research Identifies 530 Coastal “Dead Zones” and 228 Marine Eutrophic Sites