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Update 15: August
6, 2002-11
Copyright © 2002 Earth Policy Institute
WATER DEFICITS GROWING IN MANY COUNTRIES
Water Shortages May Cause Food Shortages
Lester R. Brown
The world is incurring a vast water deficit. It
is largely invisible, historically recent, and growing fast. Because this
impending crisis typically takes the form of aquifer overpumping and falling
water tables, it is not visible. Unlike burning forests or invading sand
dunes, falling water tables cannot be readily photographed. They are often
discovered only when wells go dry.
The world water deficit is recent--a product of the tripling of water
demand over the last half-century and the rapid worldwide spread of powerful
diesel and electrically driven pumps. The drilling of millions of wells
has pushed water withdrawals beyond the recharge of many aquifers. The
failure of governments to limit pumping to the sustainable yield of aquifers
means that water tables are now falling in scores of countries.
We are consuming water that belongs to future generations. In some countries,
the fall of water tables is dramatic. In Yemen, a country of 19 million,
the water table under most of the country is falling by roughly 2 meters
a year as water use far exceeds the sustainable yield of aquifers. World
Bank official Christopher Ward observes that "groundwater is being mined
at such a rate that parts of the rural economy could disappear within
a generation."
In the basin where the capital, Sana'a, is located and where the water
table is falling 6 meters (nearly 20 feet) per year, the aquifer will
be depleted by the end of this decade. In the search for water, the Yemeni
government has drilled test wells in the basin that are 2 kilometers (1.2
miles) deep, depths normally associated with the oil industry, but they
have failed to find water. Yemen must soon decide whether to bring water
to Sana'a, possibly from coastal desalting plants, or to relocate the
capital.
Iran, a country of 70 million people, is facing an acute shortage of water.
Under the agriculturally rich Chenaran Plain in northeastern Iran, the
water table was falling by 2.8 meters a year in the late 1990s. But in
2001 the cumulative effect of a three-year drought and the new wells being
drilled both for irrigation and to supply the nearby city of Mashad dropped
the aquifer by an extraordinary 8 meters. Villages in eastern Iran are
being abandoned as wells go dry, generating a swelling flow of water refugees.
Shortages of water in Egypt, which is entirely
dependent on the Nile River, are well known. With the Nile now reduced
to a trickle as it enters the Mediterranean, the three principal countries
of the Nile River Basin--Egypt, Ethiopia, and Sudan--can each increase
its take from the river only at the expense of the other two. With the
combined population of these countries projected to climb from 167 million
today to 264 million in 2025, all three are facing growing grain deficits
as a result of water shortages.
In Mexico--home to 104 million people and growing by 2 million per year--the
demand for water has outstripped supply in many states. In the agricultural
state of Guanajuato, for example, the water table is falling by 1.8-3.3
meters a year. Mexico City's water problems are legendary. How the United
States and Mexico share the water of the Rio Grande has become a thorny
issue in U.S.-Mexican relations.
A World Bank study of the water balance in the North China Plain calculated
an annual deficit of 37 billion tons of water. Using the rule of thumb
of 1,000 tons of water to produce 1 ton of grain, this is equal to 37
million tons of grain--enough to feed 111 million Chinese at their current
level of consumption. In effect, 111 million Chinese are being fed with
grain produced with water that belongs to their children. Scores of other
countries are running up regional water deficits, including nearly all
of those in Central Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa, plus India,
Pakistan, and the United States.
Historically, water shortages were local, but in an increasingly integrated
world economy, the shortfalls can cross national boundaries via the international
grain trade. Water-scarce countries often satisfy the growing needs of
cities and industry by diverting water from irrigation and importing grain
to offset the resulting loss of production. Since a ton of grain equals
1,000 tons of water, importing grain is the most efficient way to import
water. World grain futures will soon in effect become world water futures.
Although military conflicts over water are always a possibility, future
competition for water seems more likely to take place in world grain markets.
This can be seen with Iran and Egypt, both of which now import more wheat
than Japan, traditionally the world's leading importer. Imports supply
40 percent or more of the total consumption of grain--wheat, rice, and
feedgrains--in both countries. Numerous other water-short countries also
import much of their grain. Morocco brings in half of its grain. For Algeria
and Saudi Arabia, the figure is over 70 percent. Yemen imports nearly
80 percent of its grain, and Israel, more than 90 percent.
Seventy percent of world water use, including all the water diverted from
rivers and pumped from underground, is used for irrigation, 20 percent
is used by industry, and 10 percent goes to residences. Thus if the world
is facing a water shortage, it is also facing a food shortage. Water deficits,
which are already spurring heavy grain imports in numerous smaller countries,
may soon do the same in larger countries, such as China or India.
Even with the overpumping of its aquifers, China is developing a grain
deficit. After rising to an historical peak of 392 million tons in 1998,
grain production in the world's largest nation fell below 350 million
tons in 2000, 2001, and 2002. The resulting annual deficits of 40 million
tons or so have been filled by drawing down the country's extensive grain
reserves. But if this situation continues, China soon will be forced to
turn to the world grain market.
When this happens, it will almost certainly drive grain prices upward.
Remember that when the Soviets decided after a poor harvest in 1972 to
import grain rather than tighten their belts, the world wheat price climbed
from $1.90 per bushel in 1972 to $4.89 in 1974. The two keys to stabilizing
aquifers are raising water prices and stabilizing population.
The first step is to eliminate the pervasive subsidies that create artificially
low prices for water in so many countries. The next is to raise water
prices to the point where they will reduce pumping to a sustainable level
by raising water productivity and reducing water use in all segments of
society. Low-income urban consumers can be protected with "lifeline rates"
that provide for basic needs at an affordable price. Prices of underground
water can be raised by installing meters on pumps and charging for water
as Mexico has done or by auctioning permits to operate wells. Either way,
water prices rise.
The second key is to quickly stabilize population in water-short countries.
Most of the 3 billion people projected to be added worldwide by mid-century
will be born in countries already experiencing water shortages. Unless
population growth can be slowed quickly by investing heavily in female
literacy and family planning services, there may not be a humane solution
to the emerging world water shortage.
Copyright
© 2002 Earth Policy Institute
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
From Earth Policy Institute
Lester R. Brown, Eco-Economy:
Building an Economy for the Earth (New York: W.W. Norton & Company,
2001).
Lester R. Brown, "World Grain Harvest Falling Short by
54 Million Tons: Water Shortages Contributing to Shortfall," Eco-Economy
Update, 21 November 2001.
Lester R. Brown, "Worsening Water Shortages Threaten China's
Food Security," Eco-Economy
Update, 4 October 2001.
From Other Sources
Peter Gleick, The World's Water (Washington, DC:
Island Press, various years).
Sandra Postel, Pillar of Sand (New York: W.W. Norton
& Company and Worldwatch Institute, 1999).
Sandra Postel, Last Oasis: Facing Water Scarcity
(New York: W.W. Norton & Company and Worldwatch Institute, 1997).
LINKS
AQUASTAT, global information system of water and agriculture
from the Land and Water Development Division of the U.N. Food and Agriculture
Organization
http://www.fao.org/ag/agl/aglw/aquastat/main/index.stm
International Water Management Institute
http://www.iwmi.cgiar.org/
The World's Water
http://www.worldwater.org
United Nations Environment Programme, UNEP Freshwater
Site
http://freshwater.unep.net
Worldwatch Institute, Water Mini Site
http://www.worldwatch.org/taxonomy/term/102
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