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Ambient Water Comments on Global Water Scarcity Issues as Many Look to El Nino to Provide Drought Relief

Ambient Water Comments on Global Water Scarcity Issues as Many Look to El Nino to Provide Drought Relief.

articleJapan Food Tech Holdings, Inc.October 15, 20155/company/japan-food-tech-holdings-inc/news/ambient-water-comments-on-global-water-scarcity-issues-as-many-look-to-el-nino-to-provide-drought-relief
Ambient Water Comments on Global Water Scarcity Issues as Many Look to El Nino to Provide Drought Relief

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[{"type":"text","content":"\nAmbient Water Comments on Global Water Scarcity Issues as Many Look to El Nino to Provide Drought Relief\n\nAmbient Water Comments on Global Water Scarcity Issues as Many Look to El Nino to Provide Drought Relief\n\n\nCompany Continues to Penetrate Drought Stricken Areas to Showcase Atmospheric Water Generation Technology as Debate Continues on Whether El Nino Will Bring Enough Rain to Make Positive Impact or Worsen Conditions Further\n\n SPOKANE, WA--(Marketwired - October 15, 2015) - Ambient Water (OTCQB: AWGI), a leading provider of atmospheric water generation systems for extracting water from humidity in the air, today commented on the pending El Niño's impact on the drought in California and across the globe as the company continues to showcase its atmospheric water generation technology in regions of extreme water scarcity. There has been much debate over what relief, if any, the El Niño will bring to areas like California, though recent reports say this could be the second strongest El Niño since 1950, and that Southern California could be in for a deluge of rain. Those reports, however, come less than two months after California's own state climatologist was quoted as saying the State could not count on the El Niño to halt or reverse drought conditions. While the debate rages on about California, other drought ravaged areas across the Pacific are preparing for El Niño and the possible negative impacts it could bring. Papua New Guinea has already seen two dozen people die from hunger and drought, and it is feared that the El Niño could leave four million more people across the Pacific without food or water. It's been reported that this El Niño could be as bad as in 1997-1998, when an estimated 23,000 people died.\"It's the natural reaction when we have drought to hope for rain and to think a lot of rain can just solve everything. But these large natural weather phenomena's like El Niño can be so severe that it just exacerbates the issue even further,\" said Keith White, Founder and CEO of Ambient Water. \"We've seen it happen before, where the weather is so severe that infrastructure is destroyed and people end up losing their food and water sources. This leads to disease and death, often on a larger scale than when the original drought conditions existed. So while it is a positi...

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