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RandomGuy
08-16-2006, 12:45 PM
Wealthy nations face water crisis like poor: WWF

GENEVA (AFP) - Wealthy nations are facing a water crisis mirroring the one experienced by drought-plagued poor countries, the environmental group WWF warned in a report.

The report, "Rich countries, poor water", said that climate change, drought, and loss of natural wetlands that store water, along with mismanagement of freshwater resources, pollution, and overconsumption by industry, agriculture and big cities were stripping supplies.

The report singled out Australia, European countries, the United States and Japan.

It also warned that major schemes in emerging nations, such as redirecting rivers like China's Yangtse, merely shifted problems elsewhere and replicated errors made in the past by rich nations.

"Economic riches don't translate to plentiful water," says Jamie Pittock, Director of WWF's Global Freshwater Programme.

The report underlined that the crisis was best tackled first by conservation of natural resources.

"The crisis in rich nations is proof that wealth and infrastructure are no insurance against scarcity, pollution, climate change and drought. They are clearly no substitute for protecting rivers and wetlands, and restoring floodplain areas," adds Pittock.

In Europe, countries on the Atlantic seaboard have experienced more droughts while Mediterranean nations are squandering natural resources with poorly thought out expansion of tourism and agriculture in some areas, according to the report.

Meanwhile, contamination of wetlands polluted by industry in Eastern Europe has yet to be tackled, the WWF said.

In Australia, annual rainfall has been declining since a sudden drop of 15 percent in the 1970s, prompting the western coastal city of Perth to build a desalination plant to meet its needs.

Natural groundwater sources that gave the Australian desert town of Alice Springs its name were "ancient" and no longer recharged, the WWF underlined.

"Alternative water sources are likely to be both expensive and similarly limited," it added.

Despite high rainfall in Japan, the report said the country's population density was gaining the upper hand on what it acknowledged was "high quality" supply and sanitation engineering.

The report said Japanese water supplies were increasingly contaminated.

Big cities were proving to be ever more thirsty.

In some instances, such as in Houston or Sydney, they were simply overconsuming, according to the report. In London, leakage from ageing water mains is estimated at 300 olympic-size swimming pools a day.

But the WWF praised New York, noting that it had less severe water problems because of a tradition of conserving key catchment areas and green areas in New York state.

Other areas of the United States are already using substantially more water than can be replenished naturally, a situation that is likely to be exacerbated by climate change, the report said.

Increased salt levels or contamination by pollutants that would otherwise be diluted were also a growing threat in areas suffering from water scarcity, it added.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20060816/sc_afp/wwfenvironmentwater

Water and energy constraints will make future economic growth dependent on "green" policies.

It will also slow future encomic growth compared to past economic growth.

RandomGuy
08-16-2006, 12:54 PM
Here's another related article that provides a bit more depth.


Billions face water shortages, crisis looms: agency

CANBERRA (Reuters) - A third of the world is facing water shortages because of poor management of water resources and soaring water usage, driven mainly by agriculture, the International Water Management Institute said on Wednesday.

Water scarcity around the world was increasing faster than expected, with agriculture accounting for 80 percent of global water consumption, the world authority on fresh water management told a development conference in Canberra.

Globally, water usage had increased by six times in the past 100 years and would double again by 2050, driven mainly by irrigation and demands by agriculture, said Frank Rijsberman, the institute's director-general.

Billions of people in Asia and Africa already faced water shortages because of poor water management, he said.

"We will not run out of bottled water any time soon but some countries have already run out of water to produce their own food," he said.

"Without improvements in water productivity ... the consequences of this will be even more widespread water scarcity and rapidly increasing water prices."

The Sri Lanka-based institute, funded by international agricultural research organisations, is due to formally release its findings at a conference in Sweden later this month.

Rijsberman said water scarcity in Asia and Australia affected about 1.5 billion people and was caused by over-allocating water from rivers, while scarcity in Africa was caused by a lack of infrastructure to get the water to the people who need it.

"The water is there, the rainfall is there, but the infrastructure isn't there," Rijsberman told reporters.

He said more needed to be done to promote rain-fed agriculture and to increase water storage in Africa, where many people live with water scarcity.

THE PRICE IS NOT RIGHT

"Irrigation needs to be reinvented," said Rijsberman, adding irrigation in many countries was inefficient.

But scarcity problems could also be overcome by more efficient water use, recycling and better pricing of water, which in its bottled form was already rivaling the cost of oil.

Rising living standards in India and China would lead to increased demand for better food, which would take more water to produce, he said.

Rijsberman said the price of water would have to increase to meet an expected 50 percent increase in the amount of food the world will need in the next 20 years.

He said in Australia, five years into a drought, irrigation water costs less than five U.S. cents a cubic meter, compared to $1 to $2 per cubic meter for drinking tap water and $100 to $200 per cubic meter for bottled drinking water.

Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer, whose constituency covers the mouth of Australia's longest river system, the Murray-Darling, said solving water problems was a pressing problem for the world.

"Improving the efficiency of agricultural production and water use is fundamentally important to improving economic growth, sustainability and reducing poverty," Downer said.

The Murray-Darling runs through Australia's main crop and food-growing region but water flows have dropped dramatically because of drought and large amounts of river water pumped out to irrigate cotton.

Downer said Australian researchers were working with counterparts in China to develop new irrigation methods for rice, while Australian aid programmes were working to improve water in the Mekong River through Laos, Cambodia, Thailand and Vietnam.

A report on global water by environment group WWF released on Wednesday warned that rich nations, like Australia, were not immune to the coming water crisis.

It said Sydney was using more water than could be replenished and Australia had among the highest water usage in the world.

Each day, urban Australians use an average of 300 litres of water each, compared with Europeans who consume about 200 litres, while people in sub-Saharan Africa existed on 10-20 litres a day, said the report.

(from Yahoo.news)

boutons_
08-16-2006, 02:25 PM
http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/metro/stories/MYSA081606.01A.water_ogallala.350bcb1.html

smeagol
08-16-2006, 09:33 PM
I agree with environmentalists on this one. The world needs cleaner sources of energy. It's imperative governments start to fund the appropriate research.

Nbadan
08-16-2006, 10:28 PM
It's not gonna be Islamo-fascism that is gonna start WW3, although the politicians will you it as a cop out, the real causes will be oil, gas, and fresh water.

01Snake
08-16-2006, 10:29 PM
san antonio is a water waster

We actually have to HAVE water in order to waste it!
:lol

LaMarcus Bryant
08-17-2006, 12:13 AM
san antonio is a water waster

Are you kidding? SA is at the top of the list for large texas cities in water efficiency. Dallas is the very worst. And it shows--Every single apartment complex, every park, every sidewalk sprinkler, ALWAYS is either broken, misfired, or misaimed, resulting in a shitload of wasted water on concrete and streets. I am not kidding. I heard about Dallas being last before moving here, and now I realize why.

They have such harsh restrictions for northern areas, it shocks me that you can find such water wasting on literally any street you look hard enough at.


If texas ever wants to make some strides in this department they have to get rid of that ridiculous land owner law in regards to water usage.