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June 21, 2000-4
Copyright © 2001 Earth Policy Institute
Population Growth Sentencing Millions
to Hydrological Poverty
Lester R. Brown
At a time when drought in the United States,
Ethiopia, and Afghanistan is in the news, it is easy to forget that
far more serious water shortages are emerging as the demand for
water in many countries simply outruns the supply. Water tables
are now falling on every continent. Literally scores of countries
are facing water shortages as water tables fall and wells go dry.
We live in a water-challenged world, one that
is becoming more so each year as 80 million additional people stake
their claims to the Earths water resources. Unfortunately,
nearly all the projected 3 billion people to be added over the next
half century will be born in countries that are already experiencing
water shortages. Even now many in these countries lack enough water
to drink, to satisfy hygienic needs, and to produce food.
By 2050, India is projected to add 519 million
people and China 211 million. Pakistan is projected to add nearly
200 million, going from 151 million at present to 348 million. Egypt,
Iran, and Mexico are slated to increase their populations by more
than half by 2050. In these and other water-short countries, population
growth is sentencing millions of people to hydrological poverty,
a local form of poverty that is difficult to escape.
Even with todays 6 billion people, the
world has a huge water deficit. Using data on overpumping for China,
India, Saudi Arabia, North Africa, and the United States, Sandra
Postel, author of Pillar of Sand: Can
the Irrigation Miracle Last?, calculates the annual depletion
of aquifers at 160 billion cubic meters or 160 billion tons. Using
the rule of thumb that it takes 1,000 tons of water to produce 1
ton of grain, this 160-billion-ton water deficit is equal to 160
million tons of grain or one half the U.S. grain harvest.
At average world grain consumption of just over
300 kilograms or one third of a ton per person per year, this would
feed 480 million people. Stated otherwise, 480 million of the worlds
6 billion people are being fed with grain produced with the unsustainable
use of water.
Overpumping is a new phenomenon, one largely
confined to the last half century. Only since the development of
powerful diesel and electrically driven pumps have we had the capacity
to pull water out of aquifers faster than it is replaced by precipitation.
Some 70 percent of the water consumed worldwide,
including both that diverted from rivers and that pumped from underground,
is used for irrigation, while some 20 percent is used by industry,
and 10 percent for residential purposes. In the increasingly intense
competition for water among sectors, agriculture almost always loses.
The 1,000 tons of water used in India to produce 1 ton of wheat
worth perhaps $200 can also be used to expand industrial output
by easily $10,000, or 50 times as much. This ratio helps explain
why, in the American West, the sale of irrigation water rights by
farmers to cities is an almost daily occurrence.
In addition to population growth, urbanization
and industrialization also expand the demand for water. As developing
country villagers, traditionally reliant on the village well, move
to urban high-rise apartment buildings with indoor plumbing, their
residential water use can easily triple. Industrialization takes
even more water than urbanization.
Rising affluence in itself generates additional
demand for water. As people move up the food chain, consuming more
beef, pork, poultry, eggs, and dairy products, they use more grain.
A U.S. diet rich in livestock products requires 800 kilograms of
grain per person a year, whereas diets in India, dominated by a
starchy food staple such as rice, typically need only 200 kilograms.
Using four times as much grain per person means using four times
as much water.
Once a localized phenomenon, water scarcity is
now crossing national borders via the international grain trade.
The worlds fastest growing grain import market is North Africa
and the Middle East, an area that includes Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia,
Libya, Egypt, and the Middle East through Iran. Virtually every
country in this region is simultaneously experiencing water shortages
and rapid population growth.
As the demand for water in the regions
cities and industries increases, it is typically satisfied by diverting
water from irrigation. The loss in food production capacity is then
offset by importing grain from abroad. Since 1 ton of grain represents
1,000 tons of water, this becomes the most efficient way to import
water.
Last year, Iran imported 7 million tons of wheat,
eclipsing Japan to become the worlds leading wheat importer.
This year, Egypt is also projected to move ahead of Japan. Iran
and Egypt have nearly 70 million people each. Both populations are
increasing by more than a million a year and both are pressing against
the limits of their water supplies.
The water required to produce the grain and other
foodstuffs imported into North Africa and the Middle East last year
was roughly equal to the annual flow of the Nile River. Stated otherwise,
the fast-growing water deficit of this region is equal to another
Nile flowing into the region in the form of imported grain.
It is now often said that future wars in the
region will more likely be fought over water than oil. Perhaps,
but given the difficulty in winning a water war, the competition
for water seems more likely to take place in world grain markets.
The countries that will winin this competition will
be those that are financially strongest, not those that are militarily
strongest.
The world water deficit grows larger with each
year, making it potentially more difficult to manage. If we decided
abruptly to stabilize water tables everywhere by simply pumping
less water, the world grain harvest would fall by some 160 million
tons, or 8 percent, and grain prices would go off the top of the
chart. If the deficit continues to widen, the eventual adjustment
will be even greater.
Unless governments in water-short countries act
quickly to stabilize population and to raise water productivity,
their water shortages may soon become food shortages. The risk is
that the growing number of water-short countries, including population
giants China and India, with rising grain import needs will overwhelm
the exportable supply in food surplus countries, such as the United
States, Canada, and Australia. This in turn could destabilize world
grain markets.
Another risk of delay in dealing with the deficit
is that some low-income, water-short countries will not be able
to afford to import needed grain, trapping millions of their people
in hydrological poverty, thirsty and hungry, unable to escape.
Although there are still some opportunities for
developing new water resources, restoring the balance between water
use and the sustainable supply will depend primarily on demand-side
initiatives, such as stabilizing population and raising water productivity.
Governments can no longer separate population
policy from the supply of water. And just as the world turned to
raising land productivity a half century ago when the frontiers
of agricultural settlement disappeared, so it must now turn to raising
water productivity. The first step toward this goal is to eliminate
the water subsidies that foster inefficiency. The second step is
to raise the price of water to reflect its cost. Shifting to more
water-efficient technologies, more water-efficient crops, and more
water-efficient forms of animal protein offer a huge potential for
raising water productivity. These shifts will move faster if the
price of water more closely reflects its value.
See
all data and graphs (52k, approx. 13 sec at 33.6 speed)
Copyright
© 2000 Earth Policy Institute
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FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
From Worldwatch Institute
Sandra Postel, Pillar of Sand: Can the Irrigation
Miracle Last? (W.W. Norton & Co., NY: 1999)
Sandra Postel, Redesigning Irrigated Agriculture, in
State of the World 2000 (W.W. Norton & Co., NY: 2000)
Sandra Postel, Dividing the Waters: Food Security, Ecosystem
Health, and the New Politics of Scarcity, Worldwatch Paper 132
(Worldwatch Institute, Washington, DC: 1996)
Lester R. Brown and Brian Halweil, China¯s Water Shortages
Could Shake World Food Security, World Watch, July/August
1998.
From Other Sources
Peter H. Gleick, The Worlds Water: The
Biennial Report on Freshwater Resources (Island Press, Washington,
DC: 2000)

LINKS
International Water Management Institute, Sri Lanka
http://www.cgiar.org/iwmi/
IWMI map of global water scarcity projected for 2025
http://www.cgiar.org/iwmi/
home /wsmap.htm
The World's Water
http://www.worldwater.org/
a site dedicated to providing up-to-date water information and data
and web connections to organizations and individuals working on
a wide range of global freshwater problems and solutions.



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