Of a population
of roughly 6.1 billion, more than 1 billion lack access to potable water.
The World Health Organization says that at any time, up to half of humanity
has one of the six main diseases -- diarrhea, schistosomiasis, or trachoma,
or infestation with ascaris, guinea worm, or hookworm -- associated with
poor drinking water and inadequate sanitation. About 5 million people
die each year from poor drinking water, poor sanitation, or a dirty home
environment -- often resulting from water shortage (see "Tackling the
Big Three" in the bibliography).
Parched
places
One glance at the map tells you that water is shortest in equatorial countries, often where populations are rising. (Population data below from Population Reference Bureau).
China, with
1.26 billion people, is "the one area worrying most people most of the
time," says Marq de Villiers, author of the recently published "Water
" (see bibliography). In
dry Northern China, he says, "the water table is dropping one meter per
year due to overpumping, and the Chinese admit that 300 cities are running
short. They are diverting water from agriculture and farmers are going
out of business." Some Chinese rivers are so polluted with heavy metals
that they can't be used for irrigation, he adds."They're disgraceful,
unusable, industrial sewers," says de Villiers. As farmers go out of business, China will
have to import more food.
Israel (population
6.2 million), invented many water-conserving technologies, but water withdrawals
still exceed resupply. Overpumping of aquifers along the coast is allowing
seawater to pollute drinking water. Like neighboring Jordan, Israel is
largely dependent on the Jordan River for fresh water.
Water
Fight
Egypt, whose population of 68 million may reach 97 million by 2025, gets essentially no rainfall.
"The Nile is one
I worry about," says Sandra Postel, director of the Global Water Policy Project.
Egypt, she says, is militarily powerful but vulnerable. "The hydropolitics
might favor some military action, because Egypt is so heavily dependent
on the Nile, it's already virtually tapping out the supply, and Ethiopia
is now getting interested in developing the headwaters."
When a World Bank
official suggested several years ago that water wars are not far off,
he might have had Egypt on his mind -- or Turkey, Syria and Iraq, another
trio of Middle-Eastern states that are locked in an uncomfortable embrace
over water.
The Tigris and
Euphrates Rivers both rise in Turkey and flow unimpeded to Syria and Iraq,
where they provide the bulk of irrigation water needed in the arid climate.
Turkey has proposed a series of dams that would reduce river flow. That
causes alarm downstream.
A
working river
International water politics play a role in the Southwestern United States, where the Colorado River is shared by many states before its dregs trickle into Mexico. All along the river, water is diverted for irrigation and urban water -- with Arizona and California the biggest users. Because Mexico uses the dribble of water that reaches it for irrigation, virtually nothing reaches the river's once-fertile -- and now parched and polluted -- delta on the Sea of Cortez.
The Colorado may
be completely allocated, but the Southwest continues booming. According
to one estimate, five of the 10 fastest-growing U.S. states are in the
river's drainage. The water the newcomers drink is likely to come from
farmers who now receive subsidized river water.
The rivers we've
mentioned are some of the 200 and 300 major lakes and rivers that transcend
national boundaries. The list includes such major items as the Nile, the
Amur River between Russia and parched northern China, the Niger in Africa,
and the Mekong, Indus and Ganges in Asia.
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