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- Wiley
More About This Title Planet Water: Investing in the World's Most Valuable Resource
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Steve Hoffmann is the founder of WaterTech Capital, a private investment company that specializes exclusively in consulting and investment opportunities within the water industry. With over twenty-five years of experience in the water industryas a water rate designer, resource economist, entrepreneur, and investorHoffmann has witnessed firsthand the dramatic transition of the water business. He was one of the earliest financiers to recognize the potential of water as an investment theme, and has been a contributing editor to the Water Investment Newsletter for more than fourteen years. Hoffmann is also cofounder and principal architect of the Palisades Water Indexes, which serve as the tracking indexes for several leading water ETFs.
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Chapter 1. Water: Prerequisite for Life, and Living.
Prerequisite for Life.
Prerequisite for Living.
Chapter 2. The Global Water Condition.
The Human Cost of Waterborne Disease.
Supply and Demand.
Regional Fundamentals.
Water Institutions.
Overview of Water Reguation in the United States.
Global Water Regulations.
Non-Governmental Organizations.
The Institutional Impact on Water Investing.
The Role of Water in Economic Growth.
Chapter 3. Public Good, Commodity or Resource?
What Is Water?
Water as a Public (Social) Good.
Water as a Commodity.
The Answer: Water as a Resource.
Chapter 4. The Cost of Clean Water.
How Big Is the Universe?
The Global Cost of Clean Water.
From the Whole to the Parts.
The Transition from Cost to Price.
Part II. Investing in Water.
Chapter 5. The Business of Water.
Water versus Wastewater.
Functional Categories.
Water-Related Applications.
Drivers of the Water Industry.
Chapter 6. Water Utilities.
A Brief History.
Regulatory Providers Face Regulatory Burdens.
Non-Regulated Activities.
The Future of Water Utilities.
Foreign Water Utilities.
Conclusions.
Chapter 7. Centralized Water and Wastewater Treatment.
The Basics.
Centralized Treatment.
Treatment Chemicals.
Mixed Oxidants.
Carbon.
Resins: Ion Exchange.
Chapter 8. Decentralized Water and Wastewater Treatment.
Decentralized Treatment.
The Roots of Decentralized Treatment.
Water Softeners and Salinity.
Groundwater Treatment.
Membrane Bioreactors: The Future of Decentralized Treatment.
Chapter 9. Water Infrastructure.
The Distribution System.
Stormwater Infrastructure.
Investment Components.
Pipeline Rehabilitation.
Flow Control and Pumps.
Chapter 10. Water Analytics.
Metering.
Monitoring, Measuring, and Testing
Asset Management
Chapter 11. Water Resource Management.
Water Resource Management Defined.
The Principle of Sustainability.
Remediation.
Water Supply: Reservoirs and Dams.
Irrigation.
Chapter 12. Desalination.
The Promise of Desalination.
The Process of Desalination.
Part III. Water Beyond the 21st Century.
Chapter 13. Emerging Issues.
Unregulated Contaminants.
Biosolids Management: There's Money in Sludge.
Biotechnology.
Regulation.
Regulating Nonpoint Sources of Water Contamination.
Water Reuse.
Water Conservation.
Nanotechnology.
Algal Toxins.
Measuring Chlorophyll-a.
Pharmaceuticals and Personal Care Products.
Chapter 14. Water As An Asset Class.
Is Water an Asset Class?
What Is An Asset Class?
Chapter 15. Climate Change and the Hydrologic (Re)Cycle.
Planning for Uncertainty.
Impacts on Water Quality.
Occurrence of Drought.
Investing in Drought.
Chapter 16. Conclusion.
The Windfall Profits Tax…On Water.
The Age of Ecology, Again.
Is Water The Next Oil?
Appendix A. Water Contaminants.
Microbial Contaminant Candidates.
Chemical Contaminant Candidates or CCL3 Candidates.
Appendix B. Acronyms.
Appendix C. Conversions.
Notes.
About the Author.
Index.
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“The book. . . might well guide some very satisfactory investments. . . Mr. Hoffmann does an able job of laying out the basics of water scarcity and delivery, and he presents a persuasive case for water's looming importance, rivaling oil as the most important commodity this century. . . A strong current of the investing advice in "Planet Water" is Mr. Hoffmann's contention that water utilities will move toward privatization and away from government management. Private management will make companies concentrate on core competencies to keep efficiencies high; those companies are the ones for investors to pursue.”--Wall Street Journal, 5/27/2009