ARMONK, NY & ARLINGTON, VA, September 7, 2010
- The Nature Conservancy and IBM today announced
plans to launch a free Web site this fall called Rivers for
Tomorrow, where watershed managers can map, analyze and share
detailed information about the health of local freshwater river
basins to inform clean up programs
The online application will provide easy access to data and
computer models to help watershed managers assess how land
use affects water quality. Issues such as water
availability, soil loss, carbon production, and crop yields can be
explored and analyzed to help understand how to mount clean up
efforts.
Users will be able to run a variety of "what-if" scenarios and
create hypothetical models to shed light on the potential or
continued consequences of development and policies in and around a
watershed. The Web site depicts scenarios that have been
pre-computed based on current and historical information, so
planners and others can get right to work.
Typically, tools and information -- especially satellite
information and analytical tools -- have been hard for the average
watershed manager to obtain. Rivers for Tomorrow will address
this challenge by making the information readily available. It
will even provide software so managers can take spending issues
into consideration when formulating their plans.
The initial pilot project for Rivers for
Tomorrow is being conducted in the Paraguay and Parana River basins
in Brazil, although the tools on the Rivers for Tomorrow Web site
will eventually be useable by any watershed manager around the
world.
Rivers for Tomorrow was developed by The Nature Conservancy in
close consultation with scientists at University of Wisconsin's
Center for Sustainability and the Global Environment (SAGE),
University of Southern Mississippi, and several Brazilian
universities including, the University of São Paulo, the Federal
University of Mato Grosso and the University of
Brasilia.
"The 21st Century presents unprecedented challenges to the
long-term viability of the world's great river systems, and the
management decisions we make today about dams, agricultural
development and freshwater conservation will affect the livelihoods
of millions of people for years to come," said Michael Reuter,
executive director of The Nature Conservancy's Great Rivers
Partnership.
"Waterways are the lifeblood of our planet, and responsible
stewardship means that experts must have access to the right kind
of information about these ecosystems, and the tools to interpret
and share the data, this is what ought to drive clean up efforts,"
said John Tolva, technology director of IBM's Corporate Citizenship
& Corporate Affairs.
"It's not a crystal ball, but the
IBM application will help local communities envision alternative
futures."
"That's why IBM is so pleased to be working with The Nature
Conservancy on the Rivers for Tomorrow project, which we believe
will equip stakeholders with new and clearer perspectives about our
watersheds, and help them make smarter decisions."
The Nature Conservancy is one of the largest environmental
groups in the world with more than one-million members that have
helped protect 130 million acres of ecologically important lands
and waters for nature and people. The Conservancy works in 34
countries and in all 50 U.S. states.
As part of its corporate citizenship efforts, IBM provided the
technical services to design, develop and test this Web
application. IBM also today announced a series of new,
water-related research projects being hosted on the World
Community Grid, another project managed by IBM's
philanthropic arm.