Innovation in water isn’t just about the next breakthrough technology—it’s about changing the system around it.
Newsha Ajami of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory says the Aspen National Water Strategy challenges a common assumption: that innovation means new gadgets or tools. In reality, some of the biggest opportunities lie in policy, governance, and financing—areas that determine whether solutions ever get deployed at scale.
The strategy calls for expanding how we define innovation—rethinking business models, modernizing regulations, and creating financial structures that support investment beyond traditional infrastructure. Without those shifts, even the best technologies risk sitting on the shelf.
Episode at https://bit.ly/AspenWaterStrategy
waterloop is a nonprofit news outlet exploring solutions for water sustainability. Visit https://www.waterloop.org/
Subscribe to catch every video: https://www.youtube.com/@waterloop
Never miss an episode! Subscribe to waterloop:
🎧 Spotify:https://bit.ly/waterloopSpotify
🎧 Apple Podcasts:https://bit.ly/waterloopApple
🎧 YouTube Podcasts:https://bit.ly/waterloopYouTubePod
Follow waterloop for more stories on water sustainability:
🔹 Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/the_waterloop/
🔹 LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/company/thewaterloop
#WaterInnovation #WaterPolicy #WaterInfrastructure #WaterManagement #WaterSecurity #Infrastructure #PublicPolicy #Finance #Sustainability #WaterStrategy #AspenWaterStrategy #Engineering #waterloop





