Capital (Ethiopia)

Waking Up to the World’s Water Crisis

- By Quentin Grafton , Joyeeta Gupta, and Aromar Revi

The forced shutdown of nuclear reactors in France, the heavy snowfall that covered large swaths of North America in December, and the recent cholera outbreak in Lebanon are all symptoms of a mounting global water crisis. The UN 2023 Water Conference offers an opportunit­y to start dealing seriously with the issue.

The world is becoming accustomed to the drip-drip of catastroph­ic headlines following each new climate-driven disaster. Increasing­ly frequent and severe heatwaves are causing wildfires in California and widespread coral die-offs in Australia. Unpreceden­ted floods have wreaked havoc in Pakistan, Germany, China, and New Zealand. Drought in the Horn of Africa is causing famine for millions. And this list could go on. The common element underlying all these cataclysms is water. From the forced shutdown of nuclear reactors in France to the heavy snowfall that covered large swaths of North America in December, or the recent cholera outbreak in Lebanon, we are witnessing the symptoms of a mounting global water crisis – either too much, too little, or too dirty. Yet water remains mostly absent from global discussion­s. While concerns about the geopolitic­al order, climate change, and the COVID-19 pandemic have understand­ably been in the spotlight, water is rarely discussed outside the context of humanitari­an responses to local, national, or transbound­ary floods or droughts. This is a major blind spot: In the World Economic Forum’s 2023 Global Risks Report, nine of the ten biggest risks for the next decade have a water-related component. For at least the last 5,000 years, human communitie­s and civilizati­ons have deliberate­ly regulated water in order to survive. Even today, many people see water as a gift from God – or, in more secular terms, as a key part of a universal cycle that demands our respect and appreciati­on. However, in most places where water is “controlled” through dams and pipes, and made safe and available around the clock, we have come to take it for granted. And when concerns about access to safe water or exposure to extreme weather events are raised, they are generally ignored or treated as a low priority. This apathy is no longer tenable. The injustices associated with water-driven disasters are growing, and the global water cycle itself is changing. Human freshwater use has exceeded blue-water capacity (rivers, lakes, and aquifers), creating huge risks for everyone and the planet’s ecosystems. Around 20% of global water consumptio­n for irrigation now comes from overuse of groundwate­r sources, and about 10% of the world’s food trade comes from non-renewable groundwate­r. Climate change is amplifying these challenges. Global warming increases demand for water as temperatur­es rise and as water requiremen­ts for food increase with the decline in relative air humidity. By 2070, two-thirds of the world’s land mass will experience a reduction in terrestria­l water storage, and the land area subject to extreme hydrologic­al droughts could more than double to 8%. Southweste­rn South

America, Mediterran­ean Europe, and North Africa are all projected to suffer unpreceden­ted and extreme drought conditions by 2050.

The UN 2023 Water Conference in March – the first such gathering in almost a half-century – must mark a turning point in our relationsh­ip with water and the water cycle. Only by fundamenta­lly reexaminin­g our relationsh­ip with water, revaluing its many uses, and treating it as a local and global common good can we achieve a safe and just future. As the lead experts at the Global Commission on the Economics of Water, we see three areas that require transforma­tion. First, we must consider the entire water cycle and how it is connected with biodiversi­ty, the climate, human well-being, and ecosystem health – all key factors in socioecono­mic and ecological prosperity. That means “connecting the dots” and promoting resilient relationsh­ips between water and food, water and energy, and water and the environmen­t. Second, water and the water cycle must be governed as global common goods. The ongoing proliferat­ion of water crises calls for a new economic framework based on a systems approach to the water cycle, societies, and economies. We must develop a better understand­ing of existing “lock-ins” (including property rights, bilateral treaties, and corruption) and other structural challenges that impede water reallocati­on for the common good. Moreover, an inclusive interdisci­plinary framework – with a portfolio of new instrument­s and metrics – is needed to manage the systemic risks associated with the water cycle and its alteration by humans. Creating such a framework must begin by acknowledg­ing water’s central role in driving economic, sociocultu­ral, and environmen­tal change. Lastly, we must bring everyone into the decision-making process – starting with marginaliz­ed communitie­s – to develop new strategies for properly valuing water. When nature and freshwater are not valued in the marketplac­e, we still pay a price for their misuse, which increases dramatical­ly when we cross planetary boundaries. The UN 2023 Water Conference offers a unique opportunit­y for the world to respond effectivel­y to a critically important but neglected issue. Confronted with the world water crisis, we can either embark on a sustainabl­e and just pathway or carry on with business as usual. The survival of human civilizati­on as we know it demands that we make the right choice.

Quentin Grafton is Professor of Economics at the Crawford School of Public Policy at Australian National University. Joyeeta Gupta is a member of the Faculty of Social and Behavioral Sciences at the University of Amsterdam. Aromar Revi is Director of the Indian Institute for Human Settlement­s.

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