Water quality champion Joan Rose receives 2016 Stockholm Water Prize
Professor Joan B. Rose wins the 2016 Stockholm Water Prize for her tireless contributions to global public health.
Professor Joan B. Rose wins the 2016 Stockholm Water Prize for her tireless contributions to global public health.
Battling a bulging tummy to get beach ready this summer? Drinking plain water could be an answer to your slimmer-line dreams says a recent study published in the Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics
High levels of nitrates, atrazine and arsenic in drinking water linked in a new U.S. study to birth defects such as cleft palate, cleft lip and limb deficiencies underlines urgent need for more research into tap water quality around the world, says Bluewater, a global leader in residential water purifying technologies and solutions.
Drinking more tap water may help people who want to control their weight or reduce their intakes of sugar, sodium and saturated fat.
The safe residential drinking water that many people living in developed societies like the U.S.A have taken for granted for decades is under threat from decaying infrastructures, climate change and lack of investment, warns Bluewater, a world leader in water purification technologies for home and commercial use.