August 7, 2007 - Lake Mead
- Runner: Sean Harrington
- Birthplace: Calgary, Alberta, Canada
- Currently Resides: Menlo Park, California, United States
- Language(s): English, French, Spanish (basic)
- Family:
- Statement: "Even though the clean water problem might not affect everyone now, there is no question that it will, in the not-so-distant future, unless we make it a priority.” – Sean Harrington, 2007
Today, as our team ran through the Mojave Desert and past Lake Mead, we were all reminded that access to safe drinking water is not just an issue affecting the developing world. Although the Blue Planet Run’s mission is rightfully focused on the 1.1 billion people who currently do not have access to safe drinking water, the extended drought in Nevada and Arizona is a stark reminder to us all in the developed world that we are not without major water-related challenges, which could worsen significantly if our climate continues to change.
Lake Mead was formed in the 1930s through the damming of the Colorado River and ensures a steady supply of water to Arizona, Nevada, California, and northern Mexico. It is one of the largest reservoirs in the world, containing 36 trillion liters of safe drinking water. Given its critical importance, residents throughout the southwest US are understandably concerned by the lake’s record low water levels. Lower levels of spring runoff, combined with strong population growth in the Southwest, especially evident in Las Vegas, has led to a 105-foot decrease in the lake’s water level since the year 2000. Lake Mead’s water levels have not been this low since 1965. (For historical water levels, visit: http://www.arachnoid.com/NaturalResources/index.html. You can view satellite images of Lake Mead, dramatically illustrating the drop in water levels over the past few years at this site: http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Study/LakeMead/lake_mead.html).
Do Lake Mead’s low water levels spell eventual doom and gloom? I’m not sure. Over the past 70 years there have been three major droughts, with the previous two (1953-1958 and 1963-1965) forcing the lake’s water level below the current mark. The lake was designed to adjust to the regular climatic cycles, such as we’ve seen. However, what is most concerning with the current situation is that the Bureau of Reclamation, which has been mandated by the Secretary of the Interior to come up with a plan for dealing with the current water shortfall, is expected to recommend stretching the existing supply of water by drawing on the water table, which can never be replaced. The only other potential solution is to enforce heavy conservation measures in Southern Nevada, California, and Arizona, which is unlikely to fly.
Whether the current drought is just part of the usual climatic cycles or one of the symptoms of global warming is hard to determine. Either way, as the situation continues to worsen at Lake Mead with every passing year, it is clear that drastic measures to deal with the crisis are on everyone’s mind, including policy-makers. As we run around the world for safe drinking water, we need not look outside the United States to see the critical importance of the issue.
Water is life. Pass it on.
August 16, 2007 - Pace Runners and Pizza
The past two nights we’ve been treated with Pace Runners here in Colorado. It is amazing how energizing it is to have new and enthusiastic faces milling about in running gear at exchange points.
August 11, 2007 - How beautiful it is
The past ten days of running back in the US has reminded me how spectacularly beautiful this country is that we live in.
August 7, 2007 - Lake Mead
Today, as our team ran through the Mojave Desert and past Lake Mead, we were all reminded that access to safe drinking water is not just an issue affecting the developing world.
August 5, 2007 - Homemade cookies
It doesn’t take much to boost morale. A dozen home-baked cookies will do the trick.
August 3, 2007 - Two fond memories
Today’s route brought us past two locales very important to me: the town of Carmel, where I proposed to Brynn, and Big Sur, where I ran one of my favorite marathons only weeks before the start of BP
August 2, 2007 - Fox News and school kids
Today was another stellar day in the bay area, packed with all the most important elements of the Blue Planet Run.
August 1, 2007 - Home Sweet Home!
Today was a glorious day as the Blue Planet Run made its return to the US with a beautiful clear day in the San Francisco bay area.
July 31, 2007 - Heading Home
In a few hours I will be boarding a United flight from Nagoya to San Francisco with the rest of Team Orange.
July 30, 2007 - Japan
What a wonderful relief to be out of Beijing and into the peaceful calm of the Japanese countryside.
July 28, 2007
This is going to be a very short blog.
Today we ran in Beijing.
It was hot.
It was humid.
It was extremely polluted.
There was relentless traffic.


