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Water Scarcity "Now Bigger Threat Than Financial Crisis"

by: Geoffrey Lean  |  The Independent UK

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A man stands next to an old well in Morocco. (Photo: Reuters)

    By 2030, more than half the world's population will live in high-risk areas.

    Humanity is facing "water bankruptcy" as a result of a crisis even greater than the financial meltdown now destabilising the global economy, two authoritative new reports show. They add that it is already beginning to take effect, and there will be no way of bailing the earth out of water scarcity.

    The two reports - one by the world's foremost international economic forum and the other by 24 United Nations agencies - presage the opening tomorrow of the most important conference on the looming crisis for three years. The World Water Forum, which will be attended by 20,000 people in Istanbul, will hear stark warnings of how half the world's population will be affected by water shortages in just 20 years' time, with millions dying and increasing conflicts over dwindling resources.

    A report by the World Economic Forum, which runs the annual Davos meetings of the international business and financial elite, says that lack of water, will "soon tear into various parts of the global economic system" and "start to emerge as a headline geopolitical issue."

    It adds: "The financial crisis gives us a stark warning of what can happen if known economic risks are left to fester. We are living in a water 'bubble' as unsustainable and fragile as that which precipitated the collapse in world financial markets. We are now on the verge of bankruptcy in many places with no way of paying the debt back."

    The Earth - a blue-green oasis in the limitless black desert of space - has a finite stock of water. There is precisely the same amount of it on the planet as there was in the age of the dinosaurs, and the world's population of more than 6.7 billion people has to share the same quantity as the 300 million global inhabitants of Roman times.

    Water use has been growing far faster than the number of people. During the 20th century the world population increased fourfold, but the amount of freshwater that it used increased nine times over. Already 2.8 billion people live in areas of high water stress, the report calculates, and this will rise to 3.9 billion - more than half the expected population of the world - by 2030. By that time, water scarcity could cut world harvests by 30 per cent - equivalent to all the grain grown in the US and India - even as human numbers and appetites increase.

    Some 60 per cent of China's 669 cities are already short of water. The huge Yellow River is now left with only 10 per cent of its natural flow, sometimes failing to reach the sea altogether. And the glaciers of the Himalayas, which act as gigantic water banks supplying two billion people in Asia, are melting ever faster as global warming accelerates. Meanwhile devastating droughts are crippling Australia and Texas.

    The World Water Development Report, compiled by 24 UN agencies under the auspices of Unesco, adds that shortages are already beginning to constrain economic growth in areas as diverse and California, China, Australia, India and Indonesia. The report, which will be published tomorrow, also expects water conflicts to break out in the Middle East, Haiti, Sri Lanka, Colombia and other countries.

    "Conflicts about water can occur at all scales," it warns. "Hydrological shocks" brought about by climate change are likely to "increase the risk of major national and international security threats."

  

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It would be easy to solve

It would be easy to solve the water crisis through a massive desalination program. All that stands in the way is the world financial elite that controls banking and credit. The world's governments could easily make the resources and labor available to do the work. The projects could be self-financed through government issuances of credit like the Civil War Greenbacks. The myth that there is no money available is all that stands in the way. Richard Cook www.richardccook.com

with global warming and the

with global warming and the melting of the polar ice caps, i'm wondering about the potential of desalinization efforts to transform ocean water into water that can be used for a multiplicity of purposes.

It is important to at least

It is important to at least learn to identify grey water from potable water- enacting programs and building methods to learn to separate grey water from Black water, using grey water in everything, except cooking bathing and drinking, saving potable water for personal use. That alone would probably halve our use odf water. Green walls, green roofs , can cut water use in half, even to help conserve and reuse water, and green ou8tr environments, much less to spread the concept it is insane to flush potable water. But, legislation and incentives to provide this kind of separation of water use in construction or even just to educate the masses are very, very, slow in coming. That isn't necessarily a problem to lay on the average citizenry who cannot contro l the situation- governments need to get their heads out of the sand and address the problem as even part of our basic value system- We consider the diamond, or gold, the some of the most valuable things on Earth, but we entirely trash our water and air, taking them fully for granted, when in fact, they are much more valuable to us than rocks.

Finally, someone tells the

Finally, someone tells the truth. The destruction of the earth is THE only thing that should be on our minds. We should greet the death of capitalism and consumerism as good news. It is time for our species to stop breeding, stop bulldozing, stop chainsawing, stop development and get a conscience. This article is rare in mainstream media. Other coming catastrophic shortages are: topsoil, oxygen, open space, ocean life, trees. Unless our species reins in its reproductive and consumptive binge, we will kill all other species, the planet, and ourselves.

Does this mean in the near

Does this mean in the near future we will be having "water wars"?

Could someone please comment

Could someone please comment to help relieve me of my ignorance? I know other people with the same question and I'm not asking this in jest: Isn't this problem solvable with desalinization plants at the coastlines? I realize huge financial investments would be necessary and there would be the political implications of trying to get the water transported to inland-bound countries like in Central Africa. That said, wouldn't the problem then just be (like most current food shortages) a matter of dealing with political obstacles? Certainly, even without globally enforced cooperation, large countries like China and the U.S. could deal with there own shortages with national infrastructure projects, couldn't they?

On the one hand I understand

On the one hand I understand that FRESH water is more limited resource than salt water. I also understand that salt water, perhaps the most plentiful resource on the planet, isn't cheap to make drinkable with current technology. What I do not understand is that there are fresh water rivers on every continent, and only the tiniest amount of this water is extracted, purified as is needed to drink most fresh water, and used. Why can't much more water be used from rivers than is done currently? Sure transporting water will cost more, as California well knows, but it seems doable. It isn't like oil where it will truly run out someday. Also, for all but the poorest countries most of the fresh water used isn't for human consumption. Some communities are already implementing systems to use rain runoff and the like for things like watering lawns, and could use it for flush toilets, washing cars, and similar large water users. Finally, it seems that progress has continued to be made in desalinizing water more cheaply. It is great that water issues are being looked into now, but the article seems far too chicken-little-like.

My mother's great

My mother's great grandmother told her when she was just a wee little girl, that one day she would see "the world run out of water," and my mother has been prophesying the same ever since I was a little boy. I thought everyone should know.

The technology of nuclear

The technology of nuclear reactions to produce electricity and desalinate water simultaneously is well known.....just needs to be implemented.

Desalinization requires

Desalinization requires massive amounts of energy/oil that Saudi Arabia can afford but we can't, any other system would make water too expensive to afford. The salt is dumped back into the ocean destroying the marine ecosystem which is already in jeopardy world wide. The occupied lands in the former Palestine state are the water rich areas the 1967 Mideast war was to obtain the water in Syria and surrounding states. You can live without oil but you die in five days without water. While we fight endless oil wars China is building dams, power plants and infrastructure in emerging third world countries, I think they will win even though they are stuck with a trillion dollars of our worthless currency.

Desalinization means a

Desalinization means a limited supply of extremely expensive water for the wealthy few. Desalinization certainly will not replace the vast rivers of fresh water that flow from the Himalayan glaciers once those glaciers, and thus those rivers, have irreversibly vanished due to anthropogenic global warming, taking with them the fresh water supply for a billion people.

I keep telling people, we

I keep telling people, we need to stop having babies. We've populated the planet, now we are the devouring it. When are we going to get it. This planet can only sustain so many people and sustain them at a comfortable level. What don't we get. More people, more food, water and other resources that are needed for all those people. We should all be reading Bill McKibbens Deep Economy, he won't say it, but he implies it, WE ARE JUST TOO MUCH for the planet. Jared Diamond implies it in his book Collapse. Oh, I don't have kids. And don't plan too. Don't get me wrong, I love kids. Nieces, nephews, neighbor kids, all come to hang out with my husband and I. We enjoy them all, but I watch them and think about how hard they are going to have it. We have know idea and in the end we are doing them NO favor by bringing them into a world that is tearing itself apart. We were lazy and did NOTHING now they will have to pay and I fear they will pay dearly.

We are having water wars.

We are having water wars. Much of the Israeli/Palestinian conflict is about water. De salinization requires high input of energy with, as was mentioned above, a lot of mineralized salt as a by product. Fueling desalinization with anything but solar would be a disaster in its own right. Solar furnaces heating liquid salt could provide and store enough energy to generate electricity to desalinate water and maybe even jump start hydrogen production as an energy storage medium to boot. There are projects in Spain using osmosis to desalinate water. As always there is no cheap or easy way out without investing substantial amounts in infrastructure. If you envision maintaining current patterns of consumption there isn't enough money, technology or material resources to do it. The bigger war is the one between those who wish to maintain the status quo and those who can see a very different future. We are seeing an uncivil war coming into the open but it has been raging for the last 30 years. With the boomers stock market/retirement holdings evaporating faster than a melting ice cap the wake up call is upon us. Until people are willing to engage in realistic conversations about what is possible and what is not and electing individuals who are willing to act on those possibilities the future of the planet is in grave peril.

Just plan with your new

Just plan with your new spouse to have ONLY 2 (two), 1 (one) or no children!!!! 2- 1-0 or 0-1-2!!!! There could be tax incentives to encourage us all to participate. Don't listen to those who say we need a growing population to hold up our economy. You know better! Just DO it, and talk to your friends! (We are happy we did!) It is clear that talking about population is a national taboo in the USA. The United Nations could help all countries face up to their denial on this, helping each country to figure its own population goals over a span of years. But we citizens can and should just take matters into our own, personal, hands on this one!

A new technology currently

A new technology currently known as "cold sterilization" is nearing the final testing stages. And if test results prove as positive as they have in early phases, it may be possible that we will be able to recycle water in a way previously undreamed of.

To answer the question "What

To answer the question "What I do not understand is that there are fresh water rivers on every continent, and only the tiniest amount of this water is extracted, purified as is needed to drink most fresh water, and used. Why can't much more water be used from rivers than is done currently" In my area on New England most of the water in rivers is used, multiple times. The waste water is put back in the river. So most river have no "natural flow" left. Also most surface water in this area is driven from under ground aquifers and springs. When water wells have been put too close to rivers they draw water from the aquifer which and reduces stream flow. Some local town keep track of historic well levels although I have not seen any results published.

Like solar power itself,

Like solar power itself, solar powered composting toilets would become cheaper and more efficient if utilized by subsidized citizens, thus enriching our soil and preserving water through this other facet of recycling. Cisterns should be more popular for gray water tasks. We also have rigged a pump to a hose in a plastic trash can that enables us to use washing machine water for our yard--crude, but worth the effort to conserve this valuable resource.