The February issue of Scientific American offers a series "Tapped Out?" on our waning water supply and how to deal with it. Features articles, statistics, and subtopics.
Water and oil don't mix. But in our times, it takes oil to make water. The oil crisis and the water crisis are co-dependent.
Did you know? Dehydration due to diarrhea, usually brought on by drinking unsafe water, is the leading cause of death for children under age five. WaterPartners International is a non-profit organization that addresses the water
supply and sanitation needs in developing countries.
LET THEM DRINK PEPSI The Globe and Mail, August 5, 2000
John Briscoe, senior water adviser at the World Bank, is blunt when he describes the looming water shortage: Unless people learn to use water more efficiently, there won't be enough fresh water to sustain the Earth's population. "If nothing happens, the situation is really quite terrifying," he said. "Without innovation, you're dead."
The coming water crisis is partly driven by population growth. But even more, it stems from a spirited overuse of the Earth's fresh water for agriculture, industry and all sorts of uses that turn good water bad. The Sri Lanka-based International Water Management Institute projected earlier this year that by 2025, only about a quarter of the
world's population will have enough fresh water. Roughly a third of the world's population will have too little water to meet their needs. That includes people in Pakistan, Syria, Egypt, Israel, South Africa and half of India and China. This figure even takes into account that these countries will learn to use water more efficiently. As well,
about 40 per cent of the world's people will experience serious financial and development problems in their quest to find the increased amounts of water required. Among those countries are Brazil, Mexico, Australia, Nigeria and Turkey, as well as large parts of India and China.
In fact, even those frightening projections may underestimate the problem. Most scenarios don't take into account the effects of global warming. When that's taken into account, even such water-rich countries as the United States and Canada may be in for some trouble. From the point of view of the World Bank's Dr. Briscoe, a big part of
the solution is to make the cost of water reflect its value. Now, people use it virtually for free.
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IN CHINA, THE DROUGHT IS NOW The Globe and Mail, July 31, 2000
Four hundred of China' 668 cities have now declared water shortages -- meaning the taps may function only a few hours a day, or not at all. At least 20-million Chinese don't have access to any running water. Another 200 million experience water shortages or some form of rationing that puts a serious crimp in their lives. In China this summer, there are daily examples of rivers, lakes and reservoirs drying up. The Songhua River, relied upon by 20 million, has gone dry. And Beijing's reservoirs, supplying 15 million, are dropping by the day.
The water shortages are the result of a century's worth of
environmental sins, what might be called China's three O's:
overgrazing, overlogging, and overpopulation. With each passing year, China -- 40 per cent of which is already a desert - sees about 2,500 square kilometres turn into desert. In addition, more than one half of China's 700 major rivers are polluted. Around urban areas, about 90 per cent of lakes, rivers and reservoirs are unfit to drink from.
Water shortages could force mass migrations of millions, which could destabilize Chinese society.
SOLAR STILL
A research institute in Israel has proposed a novel design for a solar still that can produce fresh water from saline or brackish water. Output from the unit would be 40 percent higher than conventional desalination systems. Water in the Middle East is scarce, but solar energy is plentiful.
from ENS
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