US Chemist Warns Tiger Woods Albany Bahamas Golf Course Development Could Threaten Bahamas Water Supply!

Released on: August 21, 2008, 8:34 am

Press Release Author: reEarth.org

Industry: Environment

Press Release Summary: Tiger Woods Albany Bahamas golf course and marina to sit on
Nassau\'s most plentiful freshwater lens and could threaten Bahamas water supply says
US scientist.

Press Release Body: Nassau, Bahamas (August 7, 2008) - In an interview in The
Bahamas, US water and hazardous chemical specialist Samuel Sage outlined that access
for Bahamians to a consistent and affordable water supply could be threatened by
Tiger Woods Albany Bahamas development.

According to Mr. Sage, the Environmental Impact Assessment on the proposed luxury
development does not include evidence of developers considering its long term impact
on New Providence\'s fresh water supply.

Sage also said that as far as he is concerned water is the most important issue at
stake as the exclusive project moves ahead. Sage is the president of New York-based
environmental organization, Atlantic States Legal Foundation, which works on
environmental issues. Mr Sage, who is a former Executive Director of U.S.
environmental organization the Sierra Club, has reviewed the Albany Environmental
Impact Assessment.

According to Mr. Sage, \"I don\'t think what they\'re doing is the best practice
environmentally. If they are doing the best they are certainly not sharing the data
with the public, they are not proving it.Ó

\"I\'m not saying they shouldn\'t build the resort, that\'s the decision of the people
of the Bahamas, but there are always ways to be more benign to the environment.\"
Mr. Sage said an appeal needs to be made to Tiger Woods and his co- developers to do
what they can to make the property a \"gold star\" resort environmentally.

Marina to cut into fresh water lens
Albany\'s million dollar homes, canal and marina will sit on what has been identified
by experts as Nassau\'s most plentiful fresh water repository. The \"groundwater lens\"
is a layer of fresh water that collects around five feet below ground, made up of
rainwater that has sifted through the soil and gathered there.

Currently the Water and Sewage Corporation relies on groundwater well fields for
some, but not all of the water it supplies, with the rest being shipped in from
Andros, another Bahamas island, or created through the desalination of seawater by
reverse osmosis. Groundwater can become contaminated with run off from above, or by
an influx of salt water from the ocean, making it unusable unless treated.

Mr. Sage and other environmentalists are concerned the development will compromise
Nassau\'s most important freshwater lens and it will be very costly, in terms of
money and energy, or simply impossible for it to be saved. \"One shot of money that
comes into Bahamian economy isn\'t going to do people any good if they don\'t have
water to drink,\" he said.

For more information about the ongoing destruction of one of Nassau Bahamas¹ longest
beaches by the Tiger Woods development, please visit http://www.reearth.org (see
Albany section).

For more information, contact:
reEarth Bahamas
Web: www.reearth.org
Email: info@reearth.org
###


Web Site: http://www.reearth.org

Contact Details: reEarth Bahamas
PO Box N302
Nassau, The Bahamas
Phone: 242-937-604
Website: www.reearth.org
Email: info@reearth.org

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