Water Ventures of Cleveland

Submitted by David Beach  |  Last edited January 31, 2008 - 7:13pm
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Making Cleveland a business center for freshwater sustainability

For many years, people in Cleveland have asked, “Why can’t we establish a major center for water here and leverage our location on the Great Lakes?”

To help answer this question, EcoCity Cleveland and the Cuyahoga County Planning Commission teamed up to study the feasibility of a creating such a center. The study takes a hard look at global water issues, identifies gaps in current water-related activities and organizations, and proposes an entrepreneurial model for a Cleveland center — a center that can have global impact on the sustainability of freshwater while being financially self-sustaining and contributing to the economic development of Northeast Ohio.

The research, which involved business consultants and an advisory committee of community leaders, came to the following conclusions:

  • Freshwater is the substance of life and the world’s most vital resource, more important than oil. Human civilization needs to transform its relationship to water. Improving access to clean water is essential for the health and quality of life of billions of people around the world.
  • Restoring freshwater ecosystems is essential for the continued existence of millions of plant and animal species. These needs will grow in the 21st century.
  • There are gaps in the process of providing water quality products and services — gaps related to research not being linked to user needs, a bias toward high-tech rather than appropriate technologies, insufficient support for product prototyping and field testing, and insufficient financial support and business acumen for commercializing products and services.
  • A center in Cleveland can plug these gaps and leverage the region’s strengths in water remediation, biosciences, health care, industrial design, polymers, higher education, and other areas.

The study recommends an innovative, nonprofit business model for the center. It focuses on three areas of activity:

  • Water intelligence: Understanding stakeholder needs, compiling best practices and innovations, analyzing and identifying market opportunities.
  • Incubation: Investing in innovative technologies, assisting the start-up of viable businesses, supporting the prototyping and field testing of new products and services.
  • Implementation: Leveraging practical knowledge of real-world conditions and user needs (especially in markets in the developing world) to support business success and growth.

The study also presents a phased business plan for developing this center. The bottom line is that an investment in the range of $14 million could create a nonprofit business center that could be financially self-sustaining at the end of five years from the sale of proprietary information, consulting, licensing fees, conferences, and other revenue streams. Thus, we could create a permanent resource that would make Cleveland a global epicenter for water products and services.

This center will accelerate innovation and have the potential to help millions of people around the world. It also will attract new companies and jobs to Northeast Ohio, strengthening the region’s economy while promoting a new consciousness about water — a “water culture” — that will have profound impact.

This is an exciting concept, and there is a sense of urgency about moving forward. Although Cleveland is well positioned to turn this concept into reality, it is not uniquely positioned to do so. Other cities could seize the opportunity if we delay.

Your advice

What’s next? That’s where you come in. The organizers of the study are looking for advice about possible next steps, funding sources, and people to involve.

You can see the full study here:
Global Water Ventures of Cleveland feasibility study (PDF 2MB)

And you can email comments here, or you can add a comment to this page by logging onto the site and clicking the add comment link.

Thanks for your ideas.


February 17, 2008 - 12:46am

business venture or health necessity ?

Susan Miller Says:

I clicked over to realneo shortly after reading through the H2O venture plan and offering my first 2 cents and got a whole new perspective on the water idea. It seems our librarian, Laura "Sherlock" McShane posted another perspective.So when I reread the opening text just now, it seemed to me we might need to rearrange the text this way:

"Water intelligence: Understanding stakeholder needs, leveraging practical knowledge of real-world conditions and user needs (especially in "areas of concern") to healthy populations."

You might notice that while I believe there is a business aspect involved, it seems that this news may present a reason to address a more clear and present danger:

Great Lakes Danger Zones
Source: The Center for Public Integrity

"For more than seven months, the nation’s top public health agency has blocked the publication of an exhaustive federal study of environmental hazards in the eight Great Lakes states, reportedly because it contains such potentially “alarming information” as evidence of elevated infant mortality and cancer rates.

The 400-plus-page study, Public Health Implications of Hazardous Substances in the Twenty-Six U.S. Great Lakes Areas of Concern, was undertaken by a division of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention at the request of the International Joint Commission, an independent bilateral organization that advises the U.S. and Canadian governments on the use and quality of boundary waters between the two countries. The study was originally scheduled for release in July 2007 by the IJC and the CDC’s Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR).

The Center for Public Integrity has obtained the study, which warns that more than nine million people who live in the more than two dozen “areas of concern”—including such major metropolitan areas as Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, and Milwaukee—may face elevated health risks from being exposed to dioxin, PCBs, pesticides, lead, mercury, or six other hazardous pollutants."

If you click on Great Lakes Danger Zones and through to download excepts of the report, You can find Cuyahoga and Summit County's reports beginning on page 78 of chapter 3. Looks like we may need to begin to get serious about improving our water, soil and air quality yesterday considering the Great Lakes from the largest group of freshwater lakes on Earth. Whatever we do to improve our water in the Great Lakes will affect the rest of the world.


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