Arab Times

‘Kuwait among 17 countries which may face water shortage in the near future’

Climate change role vital, to aggravate crisis: report

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KUWAIT CITY, Aug 7: A total of 17 countries, home to more than a quarter of the world’s population, are suffering ‘extremely high’ levels of water stress and taps in these regions could soon run dry.

The World Resources Institute’s Aqueduct Water Risk Atlas today released a report ranking water stress, drought risk and riverine flood risk around the world, reports Al-Qabas daily quoting https://www.dailymail. co.uk.

Agricultur­e, industry, and municipali­ties are drinking up 80 percent of available surface and groundwate­r in an average year’ in the 17 worst affected countries, WRI said.

“When demand rivals supply, even small dry shocks – which are set to increase due to climate change – can produce dire consequenc­es” such as the recent crises in Cape Town, Sao Paulo and Chennai.

Qatar, Israel, Lebanon, Iran, Jordan, Libya, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Eritrea, UAE, San Marino, Bahrain, India, Pakistan, Turkmenist­an, Oman and Botswana make up the top 17 countries.

“Water stress is the biggest crisis no one is talking about. Its consequenc­es are in plain sight in the form of food insecurity, conflict and migration, and financial instabilit­y,” said Andrew Steer, CEO of WRI.

Another 27 countries which comprised the ‘high baseline water stress’ list include Greece, Belgium and Portugal.

The Middle East and North Africa are home to 12 of the most stressed countries, while India, which is ranked 13, has more than three times the population of the other 16 in its category combined.

“The recent water crisis in Chennai gained global attention, but various areas in India are experienci­ng chronic water stress as well,” said Shashi Shekhar, India’s former water secretary, adding that the tool could help authoritie­s identify and prioritize risks.

Even countries with low average water stress can have dire hotspots, the report found. While the US ranks a comfortabl­e 71 on the list, the state of New Mexico faces water stress on par with the UAE.

1 dead, 8 hurt:

An Asian died and eight others were injured when the company bus in which they were traveling was involved in a traffic accident in Mina Abdullah area, reports Al-Anba daily.

According to a security source, following the accident the bus overturned and caught fire.

A security source pointed some of the victims suffering from burns and fractures were rushed to the Adan Hospital by personnel from the Emergency Medical Services affiliated to the Ministry of Health.

On the other hand, a citizen born in 2000 died after his saloon car collided with a trailer truck. The Pakistani driver of the truck escaped unhurt.

Beaten by relatives:

An unidentifi­ed youth reportedly assaulted the policemen when a police patrol pursued him who after seeing a police patrol stepped on the gas pedal in a vain attempt to escape, reports Al-Rai daily. When he was forced to pull over, he reportedly assaulted the man in uniform.

The daily did not give more details about the incident.

In other news, an unidentifi­ed Arab has complained to the police that while he was on his way home in a suburb of Jahra, three relatives appeared from nowhere and beat him. Police are looking for the suspects.

Woman assaulted:

Two Egyptian women have been arrested by the police for beating a Kuwaiti woman and attempting to steal her cell phone, reports Al-Rai daily.

The daily added, the incident happened inside a mosque in Salmiya at the time of Asr prayers.

Initial reports showed the women were involved in an altercatio­n following which the suspects beat the Kuwaiti woman and attempted to snatch her cellphone. Kuwait’s Army Chief of Staff Muhammad Al-Kheder met the UK’s Senior Defense Advisor for Middle East Sir John

Lorimer recently. Various issues of bilateral interest were discussed.

 ?? KUNA photo ??
KUNA photo

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