Page added on May 13, 2014
The next time your throat is as dry as a bone and the Sun is beating down, take a glass of clean, cool water.
Savour it. Sip by sip.
Vital and appreciated as that water is, it will be even more precious to those who will follow you.
By the end of this century, billions are likely to be gripped by water stress and the stuff of life could be an unseen driver of conflict.
So say hydrologists who forecast that on present trends, freshwater faces a double crunch — from a population explosion, which will drive up demand for food and energy, and the impact of climate change.
“Approximately 80 percent of the world’s population already suffers serious threats to its water security, as measured by indicators including water availability, water demand and pollution,” the Nobel-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warned in a landmark report in March.
“Climate change can alter the availability of water and therefore threaten water security.”
Already today, around 768 million people do not have access to a safe, reliable source of water and 2.5 billion do not have decent sanitation. Around a fifth of the world’s aquifers are depleted.
Jump forward in your imagination to mid-century, when the world’s population of about 7.2 billion is expected to swell to around 9.6 billion.
By then, global demand for water is likely to increase by a whopping 55 percent, according to the United Nations’ newly published World Water Development Report.
More than 40 percent of the planet’s population will be living in areas of “severe” water stress, many of them in the broad swathe of land that runs along north Africa, the Middle East and western South Asia.
Yet these scenarios do not take into account changes in rainfall or snowfall or glacier shrinkage caused by global warming.
– Wetter or drier –
As a very general rule, wet countries will get wetter and dry countries will get drier, accentuating risk of flood or drought, climate scientists warn.
But whether people will heed their alarm call is a good question.
“When seismologists talk about an area at risk from an earthquake, people generally accept what they say and refrain from building their home there,” says French climatologist Herve Le Treut.
“But when it comes to drought or flood, people tend to pay less attention when the warning comes from meteorologists.”
Water squabbles in the hot, arid sub-tropics have a long history. In recent years, the Tigris, Euphrates and Nile have all been the grounds for verbal sparring over who has the right to build dams, withhold or extract “blue gold” to the possible detriment of people downstream.
“There will clearly be less water available in sub-tropical countries, both as surface water and aquifer water, and this will sharpen competition for water resources,” says Blanca Jimenez-Cisneros, who headed the chapter on water for the big IPCC report.
Citing a 2012 assessment by US intelligence agencies, the US State Department says: “Water is not just a human health issue, not just an economic development or environmental issue, but a peace and security issue.”
Rows over water between nations tend to be resolved without bloodshed, often using international fora, says Richard Connor, who headed the UN water report.
However, “you can talk about conflict in which water is the root cause, albeit usually hidden,” he told AFP.
“It can lead to fluctuations in energy and food prices, which can in turn lead to civil unrest. In such cases, the ‘conflict’ may be over energy or food prices, but these are themselves related to water availability and allocation.”
Failing a slowdown in population growth or a swift solution to global warming, the main answers for addressing the water crunch lie in efficiency.
In some countries of the Middle East, between 15 and 60 percent of water disappears through leaks or evaporation even before the consumer turns the tap.
Building desalination plants on coasts in dry regions may sound tempting, “but their water can cost up to 30 times more than ordinary water,” notes Jimenez-Cisneros.
Efficiency options include smarter irrigation, crops that are less thirsty or drought-resilient, power stations that do not extract vast amounts of water for cooling, and consumer participation, such as flushing toilets with “grey” water, meaning used bath or shower water.
Above all, the message will be: don’t waste even a single drop.
5 Comments on "A future of thirst: Water crisis lies on the horizon"
Davey on Tue, 13th May 2014 8:16 am
More friggin 2050 projections. Folks we are there now forget 2050 projections. Water/food/energy stresses are now. Systematic risk is at its maximum. The disequilibrium break is close.
mack on Tue, 13th May 2014 8:52 am
Well, the water crisis is certainly here in Southern California. The Sierra Nevada Mountains have only 17% of their normal snow pack which is melting faster than normal. We’ve had basically no rain this year and now we are having our second heat wave at a time when it is usually cool and cloudy.
bobinget on Tue, 13th May 2014 9:02 am
Cocaine is contaminating British drinking water
2014-05-13
EVAN BLEIER
A new study of the water supply in the United Kingdom has found that British drinking water contains traces of cocaine.
The study, which was done by the Drinking Water Inspectorate, found that the water contains benzoylecgonine, the form of cocaine created after it has been metabolized by the body.
Substantial amounts of ibuprofen and carbamazepine, a drug used for treating epilepsy, were also found in the water.
“We have the near highest level of cocaine use in western Europe,” drug policy expert Steve Rolles told The Sunday Times. “It has also been getting cheaper and cheaper at the same time as its use has been going up.”
The study found the drinking water also contained caffeine.
“Intakes of the compounds detected in drinking water are many orders of magnitude lower than levels therapeutic doses,” said the report. “Estimated exposures for most of the detected compounds are at least thousands of times below doses seen to produce adverse effects in animals and hundreds of thousands below human therapeutic doses. Thus, the detected pharmaceuticals are unlikely to present a risk to health.”
Almost 700,000 people aged 16-59 are estimated to use cocaine annually in Britain.
GregT on Tue, 13th May 2014 10:10 am
The water crisis has been here already for decades. It just hasn’t been in our own backyards. Out of sight, out of mind. That is changing now, the water crisis is beginning to affect us at home, and it isn’t going to get better as time goes on.
tahoe1780 on Tue, 13th May 2014 11:19 am
No ski season here this year in southern Oregon and rationing starts June 1st. Normal snowpack of 30+ inches is less than 4.