And Nary a Drop to Drink
STEPHAN A. SCHWARTZ, Editor - The Schwartzreport.net
This is the second of two essays on water.
It is generally thought that for immediate personal needs each person on the planet needs at least 5 gallons of clean water per day. Not surprisingly, that’s not how it works out. Many poor people in Africa, Asia, and Latin America, survive on just over one gallon of water per day -- most of it contaminated - while those of us in the United States, and much of Europe, send 13 gallons down the drain daily flushing toilets.
Imagine, then, you turned on the tap... and nothing came out. It really is unthinkable isn’t it? We take it as a given that when we turn on a faucet clean drinkable water will come out, as much as you like. Will your children think that way? Maybe. Maybe not. Will your grandchildren? Definitely not.
Can this be true?
Water stress is defined as a nation providing for all purposes each individual access to less than 449,140 gallons (1,700 cubic meters) per year. Water scarcity is less than 264,200 gallons (1,000 cubic meters) per person per year.1 It takes a lot of water to be an even marginally vital human.
Six years ago, in 2000, the scientific community which keeps track of the world’s water supplies began trumpeting alarm, predicting that one out of three people in the world would have to factor water shortages into their lives by the year 2025. How wrong they were. It happened this year, according to a report presented in Stockholm during World Water Week last August; the result of work compiled by 700 scientists from the International Water Management Institute, the premier research institute studying water.1
In China, according to the country’s Ministry of Water Resources, almost two-thirds of China's 661 cities are facing water scarcity, and at least '100 are facing severe drought.' The deficit is seriously impeding development in those cities, particularly in the country’s central and west provinces, the report says.
In the Middle East scarcity of water resources is expected to create serious environmental challenges for the region, according to Dr. Zain Al Abden Al Sayed Rizk, Dean of the Institute of Environment, Energy and Water at Ajman University of Science and Technology.
And, lest one feel smug about the U.S. situation, the U.S. annual population growth of nearly three million assures coming water shortages throughout the country, as many in the Southwest are already learning. Of particular concern throughout the world, including the U.S. is the depletion of deep aquifers, what is known as fossil water. This water, locked deep in the earth is functionally finite, since it’s replacement cycle is measured in hundreds even thousands of years. Once gone it is a lost asset, and in much of the country this is happening at a non-sustainable rate.
In Nebraska, for instance, results from an annual groundwater monitoring program run by the University of Nebraska – Lincoln (UNL), show that parts of the state have experienced groundwater depletions of 30 feet, and some areas in the southwest have posted drops in excess of 50 feet.
'We certainly aren’t coming to the bottom of the well, so to speak, but the level of groundwater declines in many parts of Nebraska are indisputable and could even be viewed as alarming,' said Mark Burbach, assistant geoscientist in UNL’s School of Natural Resources. As a result water restrictions have been imposed, including moratoria on new well drilling.
It is perhaps surprising that water scarcity almost inevitably produces a second order crisis, the pollution of surface and deep acquifer water. I always find that it helps, when thinking of the 'big picture' to keep a sense of perspective by considering how that metaview impacts things in small ordinary concrete ways. So here are some facts that have struck me:
• Because of inadequate water supplies, and the infrastructure to deliver what is available, half the people in the world today lack the sanitation levels the Romans enjoyed.
• Half the hospital beds on earth are occupied by people with easily preventable diseases caused by impure water.
• In the past decade more children have died from diarrhea caused by drinking such water than all the people killed in all the armed conflicts since World War II.
• Access to clean water would save two million lives a year.
In Mexico, only nine percent of its streams and rivers are fit for drinking and, because of its poor sanitation infrastructure, its underground aquifers are almost as polluted as its rivers and streams. Corruption and poor maintenance have permitted such severe seepage that two fifths of the available surface water is lost, and half of the rest evaporates in open canals.
Similarly, in China, water pollution is literally threatening the country’s quality of life. China produced 71.7 billion tons of sewage last year, and up to 70 per cent was dumped into local rivers without being treated at all. The result: up to 90 per cent of the country's water resources are tainted to the point of being useless for healthful human consumption.2
But what we drink, or use for sanitation is only the lesser part of the emerging water scarcity trend. Direct human usage is actually the minority share of the problem. Nearly 70 per cent of water consumption is linked directly to agriculture, so let’s spend a moment with that to get a sense of proportion, remembering that, by 2020 the world will be short 17 percent of the water needed to feed the global population.
• It takes 2,000,000 pounds of water to produce 2000 pounds of grain.
• It takes 15,000,000 pounds of water to grow 2,000 pounds of cow.
• It takes 10,400 pounds of water - 1,300 gallons - to produce an eight ounce hamburger.
The depletion of the water table in almost every country of the world is already effecting harvests. Farmers in the north China Plain are now forced to pump from depths as great as a 1,000 feet, and remember this is fossil water, that will not be renewed for hundreds or thousands of years. That’s like spending principal from your 401(k) at 45.
China's grain production, which less than a decade ago, 1998, was estimated to be 392 million tons was only estimated at 358 million tons in 2005. The result: In 2004 China had no choice but to begin importing grain - seven million tons that year alone.
In the other emerging superpower, India, things superficially might look better, but this may be an illusion, for reasons I will make clear in a moment.
In less developed countries like Pakistan, Iran, Algeria, Egypt, and Mexico the crisis is both greater and closer. Three of these -- Algeria, Egypt, and Mexico, because of the evil twins, pollution and corruption must already go outside their borders for much of the grain needed to feed their populations. Taken together, the tier of Islamic countries that run from North Africa to Iran already constitute the fastest growing bloc of grain importers. And with their population growth rate it is obvious that this will go up exponentially, as the personal needs of their people collide with the water needs of their farmers.
What goes largely unrecognized is that this importation is actually trade in water - remember 1000 tons of water are needed to grow a ton of grain. To get a sense of scale, it may help to realize that the imports into that tier of countries, if one converts the grain to the water required in a year to grow those crops equals the total throughput of the Nile River at Aswan for that same year.
But, once again, it’s not that simple. As it becomes increasingly clear that the world must wean itself from it petroleum addiction, and ethanol looks to some to be the methadone that will make this possible, reality holds another nasty surprise. Remember, the water to grain equation. And sugar cane is not going to be the answer either.
'Sugar is one of the thirstiest crops in the world,' said Fred Pearce, editor of Britain's New Scientist magazine in a keynote speech last October to the two-day Sugaronline conference in Geneva. He said it is estimated that 1,200,000 to 1,600,000 pounds of water to grow one 2,000 pounds of cane. The daily world consumption of petroleum is 82.59 million barrels a day. It is even higher today, to be sure, and that’s 24/7/365. The implications don’t require an advanced degree to understand. There just isn’t going to be enough water for this solution to work worldwide. And that’s not the only energy problem related to water.
Which brings us finally, if briefly, to the 600-pound Golem we have created: Global Warming.
The World Wildlife Fund Canada (WWFC), reviewed the likely impacts of the 2-degree rise in average global temperatures, expected between 2026 to 2060, on Canada’s two water systems - the Great Lakes and the Athabasca River, which are central to that nation’s agriculture and energy development. It is not a pretty picture.
To start, this small temperature increase will result in much greater evaporation of surface water, whether flowing or still, major alterations in rainfall patterns, greatly increased glacial melting, a significant decrease in the water level of streams, rivers, and lakes.
'We think of our water resources as endless, but they're not only finite, they're diminishing with global warming,' said Julia Langer, a spokeswoman for the environmental group. 'All of the data indicates that these are diminishing water resources.'9
The agriculture implications I think you can deduce. But far less well-known is the impact this diminishment of water resources is going to have on energy production. The oil sands extraction process requires 2 to 4.5 barrels (42 – 189 gallons) of water to obtain from the gooey oil sands one barrel (42 gallons) of oil.
The Canadian report projects a loss of 10 per cent of available water from the Athabasca, which comes on top of the 20 per cent that has already occurred since 1958.9
The WWFC report projects that as a result water available in the Athabasca 'will be insufficient to satisfy the needs of oil sands production, as well as other industrial, commercial, agricultural, municipal and environmental users.'9
As if that were not bad enough that same temperature increase will drop water levels in the Great Lakes 'up to 1.2 meters' which will lead to 'a drop of up to 17 per cent in hydro-electricity production at power plants that depend on the water body.'9 And that’s just the problems on the Canadian side of the border.
Meanwhile, during that same period, the vast Himalayan glaciers will be melting; they already are to a degree that has Asian water scientists extremely alarmed. Forty per cent of the lives of the human species depend on the water from those glacier fed lakes, streams, and rivers. Studies by several groups report that approximately 67 percent of the nearly 12,124 square miles of Himalayan glaciers are receding and as the ice melts, glacial runoffs will first increase causing vast flooding in summer and that dry up, like a gambler’s bank account, resulting in severe water shortages affecting almost 2.5 billion people throughout India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan and, most worrying of all for world stability, China. The Gangotri glacier, the source of the Ganga, India's holiest river, is retreating 75 feet a year. A World Wide Fund report published last March said a quarter of the glaciers could disappear by 2050 and half by 2100.
'If the current scenario continues, there will be very little water left in the Ganga and its tributaries,' says Prakash Rao, climate change and energy program coordinator with the World Wide Fund in India. 'The situation here is more critical because here they depend on glaciers for drinking water while in other areas there are other sources of drinking water, not just glacial.'
Those thirsty billions will not just quietly lie down and die. They will seek survival, if not prosperity elsewhere, and move across the face of every continent on the globe, in what would be the largest migration of peoples in history. And that will lead, inevitably, to violence and war. The increasingly crowded space ship we are on has but one life support system. Water is destiny.
Adel Darwish. Lecture, Geneva conference on Environment and Quality of Life June 1994. http://www.mideastnews.com/WaterWars.htm. Accessed 7 December 2006.
Fiona Harvey. 'Water Scarcity Affects One in Three of the World's Population.' Financial Times (U.K.). http://www.ft.com/cms/s/3e3eeab2-3137-11db-b953-0000779e2340.html. Accessed: 21 August 2006.
Gu Jia. 'More Chinese Cities Facing Water Scarcity.' Shanghai Daily (China). http://www.shanghaidaily.com/art/2006/11/23/297912/More_Chinese_cities_facing_water_scarcity.htm. Accessed: 23 November 2006.
'Water Scarcity Poses Challenges for Middle East.' Water Technology. http://www.watertechonline.com/news.asp?mode=4&N_ID=64898. Accessed: 21 November 2006.
Robert Pore. 'Water Scarcity a Threat as U.S. Population Keeps Growing.' Grand Island Independent (Nebraska) http://www.theindependent.com/stories/100806/new_water08.shtml. Accessed: 8 October 2006
Sam Vaknin. 'The Emerging Water Wars.' American Chronicle.
http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/viewArticle.asp?articleID=15771. Accessed: 31 October 2006.
The World Water Council Report, 2006.
David Brough. 'Water Scarcity Seen Dampening Case for Biofuel.' Reuters. http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L19637034.htm. Accessed: 9 October 2006
Table 11.10 World Petroleum Consumption 1960-2004. http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/aer/txt/ptb1110.html. Accessed: 7 December 2006.
Martin Mittelstaedt. 'Canada's Waters Threatened by Global Warming Report Says.' Globe and Mail (Canada) http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20061113.WATER13/TPStory/National. Accessed: 13 November 2006.
'Water Crisis Looms as Himalayan Glaciers Melt.' Reuters/CNN
http://www.cnn.com/2005/TECH/science/09/09/himalayan.glaciers.reut/index.html. Accessed: 9 September 2005.


Comments: 21
Important to note: those Global HeartMinders who've been manifesting specific location or regional rains on request, and also then moderating the rains - We have this global water challenge before us. I'd love to see some articles which address this challenge in spiritual energy / manifestation terms as well as in political energy terms. A good thought model is what we need. Any takers?
He's the smart one who would know how to do this already. It's probably going to take me a while to figure it out. Thanks for posting.
Mary
Noting, via what I just witnessed through Michael Moore's latest movie, SICKO - noting that it's our USA propaganda that we're generous. Yes, the common people are. But the nation? Un-generous in the extreme to its own in terms of health care, compared to several other nations; and in the global scene, one USA hand "gives" but the other one takes and takes and takes. Thus my concern about what kind of shift we need to make in awareness so that we'll be truly ready to help neighbors who might be flooded out or iced out or dried out of their homelands. Ready to open our doors and help. I think we have to work from the grassroots on our Earth-Air-Fire-Water visionary/NATURE-support HeartMind structure, learning how to heal poisoned aquifers, learning how to manifest weather shifts, learning how to do better things with our wastes, and how to stop manufacturing things which dump poisons. We can DO this. We have a mighty leap to make, but we also have many powerful visionary manifesters at work around the globe.
Again, there is hope - BIG hope - but to do what we need to do, we need good solid heartmind connections. It takes a lot of groupMind power, a big powerful mental battery, to get ourselves out of our trap and into our light.
There may be a way of slowing the clock if we act now, but it's not likely.
1. David's request for balance and clearing (my interpretation) in the human/water/Florida [relationship] grid.
2. Daniela's scenario of drought, rapidly melting snow caps, and poor sewage infrastructure/terrible water pollution, plus an ozone hole
3. Daniela's mention of our inner body waters and the outer earth body waters, and the water work of Dr. Masaru Emoto
4. Rosa's picturing of rivers of living water : that works at the personal, interpersonal, intercultural and international levels on the outer; it also works really well on the inner levels, and for those who really respond to beauty, it's a great device for sending healing light / prayer energy.
And here's another bit:
5. Dr. Emoto emphasizes that when we think of water inside or outside of us, we add the energy of love and gratitude. Just thinking of those two words plus imaging water. Something we can all do often.
As Carolion mentioned Dr. Emoto, I'd like to share his affirmation for "abundance" and water - Sunshine glittering like a million diamonds on the water reflects our natural state of abundance. Infinite resources are available to us in all forms and all definitions. Our blessed water reminds us that abundance is our natural state of being.
Again, thank you - we need more articles like this and WATER 1...
All of these 'warnings' are very real, they have substance and they do very much even now affect us all and with time become much more evident as suggested ... people will do most anything to live and we all require water.
The BIG ELEPHANT in the room though ... is our ever increasing population on earth ... these 'scare' stories always tell of how many additional people will die from various calamities, often based upon shortages such as water and food etc ... thousands, millions, etc ... and of course that is meant to impact our concerns as if some of those might apply to us and our family.
Of course THAT would matter a lot IF it were to take place on a personal level ... otherwise, many might say, we could use a reduction of the earths over-population ... thus it might be a 'good' (all things being relative) thing IF a whole bunch of OTHER people were to leave our earth world ... more room for us and less stress on the environment ... many would think.
The English political economist Thomas Robert Malthus had some powerful ideas about the rising world populations that many of the worlds leaders took to heart, that a 'good' war now and then helped thin out the worlds excessive populations.
Malthus died back in 1834 but his "Malthusian" theories still thrive in the minds of our current leadership it seems ... after all, it makes a lot of common sense on the surface based upon the way that many still think where it is a competitive and 'malevolent' world we exist in where survival of the 'fittest' is the name of the 'game'.
It is that very real thinking that spiritually isolated people hold, the thinking that causes fear of shortage of necessities and the competitive natures of others that may seek to have what one wants and/or needs. The reason for seeking power and control to insure ones needs and wants, that which believes if enough is good then more is better ... greed ... and often ruthlessness with little regard for the well being of others.
We MUST come to terms in the understanding of this ELIPHANT of excess human population ... IF there is in fact such a thing.
As I suggested in the previous thread, there IS a spiritual realm watching over us ... 'they' will assist us IF and WHEN we all come to the proper realizations of that TRUTH of universal inter-connectivity to each other and everything else ... it is 'that' help which will help us balance out our population levels to an optimum level WHEN we realize it and enlist it's help by acknowledgement and belief in that possibility.
We are all meant to realize our UNITY upon earth that will replace our disunity and associated warring to death and destruction with ever more stress and pressures of imbalance that create ever more fear and competitive conflicts between peoples ... there IS enough on earth to go around if and when we cooperate ... in fact their would be a creative synergy of ever increasing abundance ... we must first come to realize the difference that results form these viewpoints and the choices we make accordingly ... we must become more spiritual and therefore more INclusive of each other.
Peace, j.
http://www.gather.com/viewArticle.jsp?articleId=281474977065384
Jerry- good points, key terms population "ELEPHANT", UNITY, and cooperation. The earth is a self regulating system. If we can not regulate ourselves she will take care of it for us. I recently joined UNITY ours is a lovely gathering of people. Peace to you and all.
..
U wishing you laughter
Gotta love that water!!
Definitely no simple matter to correct our perilous situation.
What am I missing here? All the comments on this article sound thrilled. More bad news please!! Tell us more! How about the loss of the ozone layer (Oh yeah, that got fixed), how about high blood lead levels (they aren't high anymore), well how about all the toxic chemicals being dumped around us (Actually toxic emissions have been steadily decreasing for decades, and most toxic dump sites are being remediated). How about growing hunger and food shortages (Actually nutrition in most of the world has been steadily improving, as has lifespan, while infant mortality and illiteracy have been decreasing). Well, there must be more great horrible news somewhere for us. After all this is what we love to hear.
I will stop with the sarcasm for a moment and just say this about water and climate. Global warming is a problem. Droughts in some parts of the world are a problem. But it is not global warming but global cooling that leads to loss of surface water,. One of the problems with global warming is most emphatically not loss of water. The total available water (water which remains constant in a cycle between vapor and liquid) increases when temperature rises, and decreases when water is trapped in glacial ice.
Now I know everyone will hate this comment, since I don't happen to believe in the soul purifying effects of constant doomsday scenarios (which by the way, have been with us since 1970, and none of which have come true. Ask me about the bet between Julian Simon and Paul Ehrlich). Sorry, but the truth is (horrible to say) not really that gloomy at all. Finally a request. Could someone explain to me why eternal pessimism (and no hint of any solution to perceived crises) is so popular? I don't get it.
I just wanted to say I am finally going through what is now under 6,900 pieces of gather new mail that is in my inbox on here. So with that in mind I have finally come to a piece of mail that was addressed to me in regards this article submission you have created to share with the gather community. Thank you for taking the time and sharing your piece with us here at gather. :o)
And I hope you have a Happy New Year... in 2009 :o)