Water map shows billions at risk of 'water insecurity'
Oct. 5, 2010
- BBC News
Researchers compiled a composite index of "water
threats" that includes issues such as scarcity
and pollution.
The most severe threat category encompasses 3.4
billion people.
Writing in the journal Nature, they say that in
western countries, conserving water for people through
reservoirs and dams works for people, but not nature.
They urge developing countries not to follow the
same path.
Instead, they say governments should invest in water
management strategies that combine infrastructure with "natural" options
such as safeguarding watersheds, wetlands and flood
plains.
The analysis is a global snapshot, and the research
team suggests more people are likely to encounter
more severe stress on their water supply in the coming
decades, as the climate changes and the human population
continues to grow.
They have taken data on a variety of different threats,
used models of threats where data is scarce, and
used expert assessment to combine the various individual
threats into a composite index.
The result is a map that plots the composite threat
to human water security and to biodiversity in squares
50km by 50km (30 miles by 30 miles) across the world.
Changing pictures
"What we've done is to take a very dispassionate
look at the facts on the ground - what is going on
with respect to humanity's water security and what
the infrastructure that's been thrown at this problem
does to the natural world," said study leader
Charles Vorosmarty from the City College of New York.
"What we're able to outline is a planet-wide
pattern of threat, despite the trillions of dollars
worth of engineering palliatives that have totally
reconfigured the threat landscape."
Those "trillions of dollars" are represented
by the dams, canals, aqueducts, and pipelines that
have been used throughout the developed world to
safeguard drinking water supplies.
Their impact on the global picture is striking.
Looking at the "raw threats" to people's
water security - the "natural" picture
- much of western Europe and North America appears
to be under high stress.
However, when the impact of the infrastructure that
distributes and conserves water is added in - the "managed" picture
- most of the serious threat disappears from these
regions.
Africa, however, moves in the opposite direction.
"The problem is, we know that a large proportion
of the world's population cannot afford these investments," said
Peter McIntyre from the University of Wisconsin,
another of the researchers involved.
"In fact we show them benefiting less than
a billion people, so we're already excluding a large
majority of the world's population," he told
BBC News.
"But even in rich parts of the world, it's
not a sensible way to proceed. We could continue
to build more dams and exploit deeper and deeper
aquifers; but even if you can afford it, it's not
a cost-effective way of doing things."
According to this analysis, and others, the way
water has been managed in the west has left a significant
legacy of issues for nature.
Whereas Western Europe and the US emerge from this
analysis with good scores on water stress facing
their citizens, wildlife there that depends on water
is much less secure, it concludes.
Concrete realities
One concept advocated by development organisations
nowadays is integrated water management, where the
needs of all users are taken into account and where
natural features are integrated with human engineering.
One widely-cited example concerns the watersheds
that supply New York, in the Catskill Mountains and
elsewhere around the city.
Water from these areas historically needed no filtering.
That threatened to change in the 1990s, due to agricultural
pollution and other issues.
The city invested in a programme of land protection
and conservation; this has maintained quality, and
is calculated to have been cheaper than the alternative
of building treatment works.
Mark Smith, head of the water programme at the International
Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) who was
not involved in the current study, said this sort
of approach was beginning to take hold in the developing
world, though "the concrete and steel model
remains the default".
"One example is the Barotse Floodplain in Zambia,
where there was a proposal for draining the wetland
and developing an irrigation scheme to replace the
wetlands," he related.
"Some analysis was then done that showed the
economic benefits of the irrigation scheme would
have been less than the benefits currently delivered
by the wetland in terms of fisheries, agriculture
around the flood plain, water supply, water quality
and so on.
"So it's not a question of saying 'No we don't
need any concrete infrastructure' - what we need
are portfolios of built infrastructure and natural
environment that can address the needs of development,
and the ecosystem needs of people and biodiversity."
Dollars short
This analysis is likely to come in for some scrutiny,
not least because it does contain an element of subjectivity
in terms of how the various threats to water security
are weighted and combined.
Nevertheless, Mark Smith hailed it as a "potentially
powerful synthesis" of existing knowledge; while
Gary Jones, chief executive of the eWater Co-operative
Research Centre in Canberra, commented: "It's
a very important and timely global analysis of the
joint threats of declining water security for humans
and biodiversity loss for rivers.
"This study, for the first time, brings all
our knowledge together under one global model of
water security and aquatic biodiversity loss."
For the team itself, it is a first attempt - a "placeholder",
or baseline - and they anticipate improvements as
more accurate data emerges, not least from regions
such as Africa that are traditionally data-scarce.
Already, they say, it provides a powerful indicator
that governments and international institutions need
to take water issues more seriously.
For developed countries and the Bric group - Brazil,
Russia, India and China - alone, "$800bn per
year will be required by 2015 to cover investments
in water infrastructure, a target likely to go unmet," they
conclude.
For poorer countries, the outlook is considerably
more bleak, they say.
"In reality this is a snapshot of the world
about five or 10 years ago, because that's the data
that's coming on line now," said Dr McIntyre.
"It's not about the future, but we would argue
people should be even more worried if you start to
account for climate change and population growth.
"Climate change is going to affect the amount
of water that comes in as precipitation; and if you
overlay that on an already stressed population, we're
rolling the dice."
Richard.Black-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk
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