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- <text id=90TT2210>
- <link 93TG0068>
- <title>
- Aug. 20, 1990: The Last Drops
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Aug. 20, 1990 Showdown
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 58
- The Last Drops
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Population growth and development have depleted and polluted the
- world's water supply, raising the risk of starvation,
- epidemics and even wars
- </p>
- <p>By Eugene Lindon--Reported by Andrea Dabrowski/Mexico City,
- Anita Pratap/New Delhi and Amany Radwan/Amman
- </p>
- <p> Swaminathan Asokan dreams of water. It gushes out of a giant
- tap and fills bucket after bucket. But then he wakes up--to
- a nightmare. For at Asokan's house in Madras, India's fourth
- largest city, there is no water. The tap has long been dry. So
- he must get up in the dark of night and, laden with plastic
- pails, take a five-minute walk down the street to a public tap.
- Since the water flows only between 4 a.m. and 6 a.m., Asokan,
- 34, a white-collar worker at a finance company, tries to be
- there by 3:30 a.m. to get a good place in line. His reward:
- five buckets that must last the entire day.
- </p>
- <p> Compared with many of his countrymen, Asokan is fortunate.
- At least 8,000 Indian villages have no local water supply at
- all. Their residents must hike long distances to the nearest
- well or river. In many parts of the country, water is
- contaminated by sewage and industrial waste, exposing those who
- drink it to disease.
- </p>
- <p> The sad state of India's water supply is just one sign of
- what could become a global disaster. From the slums of Mexico
- to the overburdened farms of China, human populations are
- outstripping the limited stock of fresh water. Mankind is
- poisoning and exhausting the precious fluid that sustains all
- life.
- </p>
- <p> In the Soviet Union, the mismanagement of land around the
- Aral Sea has cut it off from its sources of water, causing the
- volume of the once giant lake to shrink by two-thirds in 30
- years. Now storms of salt and pesticides swirl up from the
- receding shoreline, contaminating the land and afflicting
- millions of Uzbeks with gastritis, typhoid and throat cancer.
- In Beijing, one-third of the city's wells have gone dry, and
- the water table drops by as much as 2 meters (2.2 yards) a
- year. In the Western U.S., four years of drought have left
- municipalities and agricultural interests tussling over
- diminishing water stocks. Says Ivan Restrepo, head of the
- Center for Ecodevelopment in Mexico, where as many as 30
- million people do not have safe drinking water: "We've been
- enduring a crisis for several years now, but it is in this
- decade that it will explode."
- </p>
- <p> Camouflaged by its very familiarity, the water problem has
- crept up on a world distracted by fears of global warming and
- other emergent environmental threats. Yet water could be the
- first resource that puts a limit on human population and
- economic growth. Shortfalls of water will mean shortfalls of
- food, since up to three-quarters of the fresh water that
- humanity uses goes for agriculture. Moreover, contaminated
- drinking water in heavily populated areas endangers the health
- of hundreds of millions of people. According to the United
- Nations, 40,000 children die every day, many of them the victims
- of the water crisis.
- </p>
- <p> At the moment, countries are poised to go to war over oil,
- but in the near future, water could be the catalyst for armed
- conflict. Israel and Jordan, Egypt and Ethiopia, and India and
- Bangladesh are but a few of the neighboring nations at odds
- over rivers and lakes. Warns Arnon Sofer, professor of
- geography at Israel's Haifa University: "Wars over water might
- erupt in the Middle East in the '90s when states try to control
- each other's supplies."
- </p>
- <p> Whatever the human consequences of the crisis, it has an
- even greater effect on many other living things. Fish, birds
- and countless creatures are crowded out, marooned or poisoned
- as industry, agriculture and municipalities reroute rivers, dry
- up wetlands, dump waste and otherwise disrupt the normal
- functioning of delicate ecosystems. The world is learning that
- there are limits to mankind's ability to move water from one
- place to another without seriously upsetting the balance of
- nature.
- </p>
- <p> The idea of a global shortage seems incredible when 70% of
- the earth's surface is covered by H2O. But 98% of that water
- is salty, making it unusable for drinking or agriculture.
- Desalinization is technically feasible, but it is far too
- expensive to use anywhere except in an ultra-rich, sparsely
- populated country like Saudi Arabia. Other options, like towing
- icebergs from the poles, are also beyond the means of poor
- nations.
- </p>
- <p> The scarcity of fresh water for agriculture makes famines
- more likely every year. The world consumes more food than it
- produces, and yet there are few places to turn for additional
- cropland. Only by drawing on international stockpiles of grain
- have poorer countries averted widespread starvation. But those
- supplies are being depleted. From 1987 to 1989, the world's
- stock of grain fell from a 101-day surplus to a 54-day one. A
- drought in the U.S. breadbasket could rapidly lead to a global
- food calamity.
- </p>
- <p> Even if rainfall stays at normal levels, current world food
- production will be difficult to maintain, much less increase.
- The food supply has kept pace with population growth only
- because the amount of land under irrigation has doubled in the
- past three decades. Now, however, agriculture is losing
- millions of hectares of this land to the effects of improper
- watering.
- </p>
- <p> Without adequate drainage, continuous irrigation gradually
- destroys a piece of land--and any streams or rivers near it--through a process called salinization. As the heat of the
- sun evaporates irrigation water, salts are left behind. The
- water also flushes additional salts out of soils with high
- concentrations of minerals, leaving them to dry on the surface
- into a cakelike residue or to dissolve in groundwater and
- poison plant roots.
- </p>
- <p> History shows that such environmental destruction can have
- far-reaching consequences. The salinization of irrigated land
- led to the fall of Mesopotamia and Babylon, and perhaps even
- the Mayan civilization of Central America. Similar pressures
- are at work today. Sandra Postel of Worldwatch Institute
- estimates that 60 million hectares (nearly 150 million acres)
- of irrigated land worldwide have been damaged by salt buildup.
- </p>
- <p> Human activities have also disrupted the delicate natural
- systems that maintain water supplies. To obtain wood and clear
- land for homes and farms, mankind is chopping down forests at
- an unprecedented rate. But vegetation traps water, reducing
- runoff and replenishing groundwater supplies. Throughout the
- world, tree cutting has led to floods, mud slides and soil
- erosion during rainy seasons and acute water shortages during
- dry periods.
- </p>
- <p> Deforestation can set in motion forces that reduce the
- amount of rainfall in a given area. In a rain forest, for
- example, as much as half the moisture settles on trees and
- quickly evaporates into the sky, only to precipitate again in
- a continuous cycle. Thus when trees are cut down, rainfall may
- diminish.
- </p>
- <p> Even in dryer regions sparse shrubs can help maintain
- rainfall. Some scientists argue that once ground cover is
- stripped, the land hardens and evaporates less moisture into
- the air. At the same time, the naked soil reflects more
- sunlight, triggering atmospheric processes that reduce rainfall
- by drawing dryer air into the area.
- </p>
- <p> The result is desertification, a gradual conversion of
- marginal land into wasteland. This process is often driven by
- population pressures, which force people to work lands
- unsuitable for agriculture. In sub-Saharan Africa, for
- instance, settlers move into an area when it is wet and green,
- and then stay and remove the ground cover when the inevitable
- drought returns. Without a green barrier to stop them, sand
- dunes march inexorably forward.
- </p>
- <p> While no place is safe from the effects of the water crisis,
- Egypt, in particular, faces hard times. The country's
- population of 55 million is growing by 1 million every nine
- months. Already the people must import 65% of their food, and
- the situation could grow far worse. The flow of the Nile,
- Egypt's only major water supply, will be reduced in coming
- years as upstream neighbors Ethiopia and Sudan divert more of
- the river's waters. Egypt's only practical course is to brake
- population growth and reduce the enormous amount of water
- wasted through inefficient irrigation techniques.
- </p>
- <p> Competition for water is especially fierce between Israel
- and Jordan, which must share the Jordan River basin. Many towns
- in Jordan receive water only two times a week, and the country
- must double its supply within 20 years just to keep up with
- population growth. "We are cornered," admits Munther Haddadin,
- a Jordanian development official. With time running out, Jordan
- hopes to draw additional reserves from the Yarmuk river.
- Israel, however, will fight any plans for use of the river that
- do not give guarantees of access to the Yarmuk waters that the
- country currently uses.
- </p>
- <p> In the grip of a three-year drought, Israel too is far from
- secure, despite its formidable conservation technologies. An
- expected 750,000 Soviet emigres will probably settle in the
- cities, where the use of pure water is the highest. At the same
- time, 750,000 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip face what Zemah
- Ishai, Israel's water commissioner, calls a "catastrophe"
- because of overpumping and contamination of groundwater.
- </p>
- <p> A decade ago, a government study in China estimated that the
- nation's water resources might support only 700 million people.
- That was alarming, since the population had already reached 900
- million. Unable to increase the supply, the Politburo took the
- simpler expedient of revising the study to conclude that there
- was enough water for 1.1 billion people. As the population
- continues to grow and now surpasses the 1.1 billion mark, China
- has gradually increased the numbers in the study.
- </p>
- <p> Chinese leaders, aware of the true severity of the crisis,
- have at last begun to focus the nation's scientific talent on
- the water issue. The country has been working to develop
- salt-tolerant and drought-resistant crops, and it has begun to
- have some success in reclaiming salt-damaged land.
- </p>
- <p> In the West the most troubled dry spot is Mexico, where a
- government report asserts that "water will be a limiting factor
- for the country's future development." The demands of Mexico
- City's 20 million people are causing the level of their main
- aquifer to drop as much as 3.4 meters (11 ft.) annually. Water
- subsidies encourage the wealthy and middle classes to waste
- municipal supplies, while the poor are forced to buy from
- piperos, entrepreneurs who fix prices according to demand.
- Belatedly, the government has begun to establish a more sensible
- system of tariffs as well as promote water-saving devices like
- low-flush toilets.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the global breadth of the water crisis, the
- situation is not completely hopeless. In industrial nations the
- revitalized environmental movement has spawned a fresh
- offensive against pollution. Jan Dogterom, who runs a
- consulting firm in the Netherlands, represents a new breed of
- detective hired by governments to track down the culprits who
- contaminate waterways. Faced with the knowledge that toxins
- can be traced back to their source, many companies comply
- readily in cleanup efforts. Says Dogterom: "It is my
- honest-to-God conviction that the West European rivers will be
- clean in 50 years, and the East European rivers will soon
- follow."
- </p>
- <p> The water-supply picture may not be entirely bleak. Mohamed
- El-Ashry of the World Resources Institute estimates that around
- the world 65% to 70% of the water people use is lost to
- evaporation, leaks and other inefficiencies. The U.S. has a
- slightly better 50% efficiency, and El-Ashry believes it is
- economically feasible to reduce losses to 15%.
- </p>
- <p> Government officials and businesses are looking for ways to
- reuse waste water. With the aid of advanced technology, even
- highly contaminated water can be made drinkable again. Alcoa
- has just begun to market a new claylike material called
- Sorbplus that helps clean water by adsorbing toxic materials.
- </p>
- <p> Most tantalizing of all is the possibility that there are
- great, undiscovered reservoirs throughout the globe. Speaking
- in Cairo last June at a water summit organized by the
- Washington-based Global Strategy Council, Farouk El-Baz of
- Boston University raised hopes among African nations when he
- announced that an analysis of remote sensing data has revealed
- unsuspected supplies of underground water in the dryest part
- of the Egyptian Sahara. El-Baz believes there may be twice as
- much water stored underground worldwide as previously assumed.
- </p>
- <p> New supplies could take some pressure off rivers and lakes
- and would be a temporary godsend to millions of people. But if
- societies returned to business as usual, this bounty would only
- postpone the day of reckoning for humans and all other species.
- Humanity has long deluded itself into thinking that water
- shortages merely reflect temporary problems of distribution.
- Both industrial and developing nations are finally realizing
- that the world's fresh water is a finite and vulnerable
- resource, an irreplaceable commodity that must be respected and
- preserved.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-