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 World's Water Resources Face Mounting Pressure & Where Are the World's Looming Water Conflicts?
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 World's Water Resources Face Mounting Pressure
   
    By Elizabeth Mygatt
   

    Tuesday 01 August 2006

    Global freshwater use tripled during the second half of the twentieth century as population more than doubled and as technological advances let farmers and other water users pump groundwater from greater depths and harness river water with more and larger dams. As global demand soars, pressures on the world's water resources are straining aquatic systems worldwide. Rivers are running dry, lakes are disappearing, and water tables are dropping. Nearly 70 percent of global water withdrawals from rivers, lakes, and aquifers are used for irrigation, while industry and households account for 20 and 10 percent, respectively.

    Pressure on water resources is particularly acute in arid regions that support agricultural production or large populations - regions where water use is high relative to water availability. The Middle East, Central Asia, North Africa, South Asia, China, Australia, the western United States, and Mexico are especially prone to water shortages.

    Much of the growth in water use over the past half-century is from a vast increase in irrigation, which is used to produce 60 percent of the world's grain. Globally, irrigated area nearly tripled between 1950 and 2003, growing from 94 million to 277 million hectares. This growth, however, is tapering off as the water needed to expand irrigation becomes increasingly scarce. Forty years ago, irrigated area was expanding at an annual rate of 2.1 percent, but the last 5 years of data reflect slower growth of only 0.4 percent. Since governments are more likely to report gains from new projects than losses as wells go dry, as rivers dry up, or as irrigation water is diverted to cities, these estimates may be high and irrigated area may have already peaked. (See Figure and Table.)

    Meanwhile, the extent of irrigated area per person reached a high of 47 hectares per thousand people in 1978 and has been shrinking steadily since 1992. In 2003, per capita irrigated area dropped below 44 hectares per thousand people, the lowest level of the past four decades. With population growth outpacing growth in irrigated area, this figure is unlikely to rebound substantially.

    As demand for water continues to grow in order to satisfy rising agricultural, industrial and residential needs, aquatic ecosystems struggle to respond. Countless communities depend heavily on rivers, both for direct water use and as a source of energy. But as upstream populations increase their demands, downstream communities have less water available to them. In some cases, rivers become so overexploited that they cease to exist altogether.

    The Amu Darya in Central Asia and the Colorado in the southwestern United States are among the world's rivers that run dry for at least part of the year. Water from the Amu Darya, once the largest tributary of the Aral Sea, is diverted to irrigate the cotton fields of Central Asia. The Colorado's flow is depleted by southwestern farmers and thirsty cities alike, with over one fourth of these withdrawals - 3.8 trillion liters - going to California alone. At times during 18 of the last 26 years of the twentieth century, China's Yellow River failed to make it to the sea. In recent years, however, better management and greater reservoir capacity have facilitated year-round flow. Other rivers, including the Ganges, the Indus, and the Nile, are sometimes little more than a trickle by the time they reach the sea. (See Table of Major Rivers Running Dry.)

    As rivers run dry, the lakes that rely on them suffer as well. Lake shorelines are receding and water levels are dropping due to dramatic reductions in inflow from rivers and streams, declining recharge from overstressed aquifers, and increasing water withdrawals from lakes. For example, the Dead Sea has dropped by 25 meters (82 feet) in the past 40 years, and Mono Lake in California has fallen by 11 meters since 1941, the year Los Angeles first began to draw water from its tributaries.

    Lake Chad, once spanning 23,000 square kilometers in Nigeria, Niger, Cameroon, and Chad, now covers just 900 square kilometers and exists entirely within Chad's borders, rendering earlier maps obsolete. China's Hebei Province has lost 969 of its 1,052 lakes. In Central Asia, historic ports built on the shores of the Aral Sea are now up to 150 kilometers from the water's edge. Water levels dropped so low that the sea split in two in the late 1980s. While the South Aral Sea, intermittently fed by the weakened Amu Darya, will likely never recover, recent efforts to revitalize the North Aral Sea have raised water level from 30 to 38 meters, close to the 42-meter level of viability. (See Table of Disappearing Lakes and Shrinking Seas.)

    Falling water tables are less obvious indicators of global water shortages than disappearing lakes and dry riverbeds. Yet groundwater reserves are becoming increasingly depleted, due in large part to the rise in irrigated area and the growing use of water for industrial purposes. Fossil aquifers, which supply irrigation water to some of the world's major grain producers, are of particular concern because they cannot be replenished.

    Aquifers are being overexploited in major food-producing regions, including the North China Plain, a region that yields half of China's wheat and one third of its corn; Punjab, Haryana, and other highly productive agricultural states in northern India; and the southern Great Plains of the United States, a major grain-producing region. Together, China, India, and the United States produce nearly half the world's grain, and these three countries plus Pakistan collectively account for over three fourths of the world's reported groundwater extraction for agricultural purposes. Falling water tables in these countries may make expanding world food production more difficult. (See Table of Underground Water Depletion in Key Countries.)

    While groundwater is integral to today's agriculture, it is also a valuable resource in urban environments. Some of the world's largest cities, including Mexico City, Calcutta, and Shanghai, rely heavily on local groundwater. Thirty percent of China's urban water supply is fed from groundwater. Worldwide, it is estimated that roughly 2 billion people - in both rural and urban environments - rely on groundwater for daily water consumption.

    With the projected addition of 2.6 billion people to the global population by 2050, most of them in countries where water tables are already falling and wells are going dry, water shortages will likely become more commonplace and more severe. Absent a global effort to quickly slow population growth and to use water more efficiently, water shortages may translate into food shortages in more and more countries.

    For more information about Earth Policy Institute go to: http://www.earth-policy.org/.


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    Where Are the World's Looming Water Conflicts?
    Reuters

    Wednesday 02 August 2006

    Sri Lankan jets pounded Tamil Tiger positions on Tuesday in a battle to regain control of a rebel-held water source for about 50,000 people.

    Here are five flashpoints for potential "water wars" some experts say are looming:

    India and Pakistan

  • The six rivers of the Indus basin flow from Tibet into India and Pakistan via Kashmir's disputed mountains and valleys.

  • Recent disputes over new projects have seen Pakistan accuse India of violating the 1960 Indus Water Treaty, which gave India control over three eastern rivers, the Ravi, Beas and Sutlej, and Pakistan the three western flows, the Indus, Jhelum and Chenab.

  • June 2006 saw fresh talks about the Wullar Barrage, a navigation lock India wants to build on the Jhelum. Pakistan says the dam will let India control waterflow into the Jhelum. India says it needs it to aid river transport.

  • The dispute, one of eight issues in the Composite Dialogue Process, has seen 10 rounds of talks since 1988.

    India and Bangladesh

  • The Brahmaputra, the sacred Hindu river the Ganges, and around 50 other rivers that flow from India to Bangladesh are blamed for regular floods that kill or displace thousands of Bangladeshis.

  • Bangladesh says India's Farakka Barrage, completed by its northern border in 1974, diverted the Ganges without its long-term agreement.

  • Bangladesh complains India grants it only a portion of the water flow, with no minimum flow guaranteed, and no provisions for drought years.

    Israel, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon and Palestinian Territories

  • Israel, the Palestinian territories and Jordan rely on the River Jordan, which is fed by 3 rivers on the Syria-Lebanon border.

  • Disputes over diverting the river have spilled over into war in the past. Former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said the 1967 Arab-Israeli war was started by Syrian plans to divert water from Israel. In 2002 he said the issue may start a new war.

  • Israel's control of water supplies to the West Bank and Gaza Strip since its 1967 occupation is another flashpoint.

  • Israel says Palestinians steal water from its pipes and have drilled thousands of illegal wells. Palestine accuses Israel of taking its underground water with advanced pumps.

    Egypt, Sudan and Ethiopia

  • The Nile, the world's longest river, is the main source of water for nine countries in the Nile basin: Egypt, Sudan, Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi and Congo.

  • Eygpt and Sudan's 1929 Nile Waters Agreement, which divided up water use, is now being challenged.

  • Ethiopia, where some 80 percent of the Nile's waters originate, said last year that it wants to take more water. It accuses Egypt of blocking overseas aid for irrigation projects. Egypt says calls for change amount to a "declaration of war".

  • In July 2006 a Nile Water steering committee met to discuss Ugandan and Tanzanian plans to use Nile waters in massive hydro-electric power stations and irrigation projects.

    Turkey, Syria and Iraq

  • The Euphrates is formed by two major tributaries in eastern Turkey, flows southeast into Syria, meets the Euphrates in Iraq, and empties into the Persian Gulf. All three countries have dams on the rivers and dispute each others' water use.

  • Turkey says it contributes over 90 percent of Euphrates water, and should make more use of it.

  • Syria says Turkey's Southeastern Anatolia Project (or GAP) - a string of 22 dams and 19 power plants on the Euphrates - deprive it of its only reliable source of running water.

  • Iraq fears water will be used up before reaching it, and has complained about Syria's 1978 Asad dam on the Euphrates.

  • In 1990 Turkey turned off the water flow to Syria and Iraq, saying it needed to test its largest GAP dam. After 3 weeks it let the water flow again, fearing a looming war with a newly united Syria and Iraq.

    Sources: Reuters, The Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, Transboundary Freshwater Dispute Database, BBC.

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