Planners, manufacturers look for ways to get water to 2.2  million more people from the same — or smaller —  supplies
 The EPA says at least 36  states are anticipating shortages by 2013 even under non-drought  conditions.
 With an estimated 2.2 million more people expected to live  in Northeastern Illinois by 2030, the bottom-line question becomes not mortgage  availability or zoning densities or commuting expenses but whether there will be  enough water to go around and at what cost.
 Perched on the edge of  one of the world's great fresh water sources, the Chicago metro area,  ironically, is reaching the upper limit of the water it can take from the lake  by court order while at the same time discovering the deep water aquifers  supplying outer suburbs are not replenishing as before.
 "Most people don't think  they waste water" but at the same time they are not eager for higher utility  costs or added taxes, said Al Dietemann, acting resource conservation manager of  the Seattle Public Utilities. Businesses and consumers respond when "the public  is aware they can keep water bills down with more efficient water use," he  said.
 By 2007, the Seattle-area  Saving Water Partnership, an 18-member utility consortium in Seattle and King  County, reported the total billed water consumption had dropped 23 percent since  1990 and 13 percent since 2000.
 The drop was the result  of a public education program and through incentives to use more water-efficient  (water-saving) equipment.
 In addition to regional  planning, Illinois eventually may have to come up with a state water plan.  It is one of eight states that has approved the  Great Lakes Compact, an effort to protect and restrict access to water in the  five Great Lakes. Michigan, the last state bordering the Great Lakes to approve  the agreement, signed on Wednesday. The Compact must be approved by Congress  before it becomes law. 
 If  the Compact goes forward, it "requires the state to pass a conservation plan  with specific conservation goals and implementation steps," noted Joyce O'Keefe,  deputy director of Openlands.
 This planning dovetails with growing public awareness and  understanding of natural resources limits, O'Keefe said. It's an awareness that  is being heightened by the U.S. EPA's national WaterSense program, similar to  the successful Energy Star label, to identify products that are 20 to 30 percent  more water efficient, and local programs such as green roofs to promote water  conservation and reduce storm-water runoff.
 McHenry's underground  aquifers can produce 120 million gallons of water a day, more than enough to  supply the 34.6 million gallons a day drawn in 2000 and meet an anticipated need  of 67.5 million gallons a day projected for 2030. Future usage, however, could reach 164 million gallons a day if  all the towns in McHenry achieve their master plans, more than is now  available.
 