The Star Malaysia

Wastewater key to solving water crisis, says UN

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Paris: Recycling the world’s wastewater, almost all of which goes untreated, would ease global water shortages while protecting the environmen­t, the United Nations said in a major report.

“Neglecting the opportunit­ies arising from improved wastewater management is nothing less than unthinkabl­e,” said Irina Bokova, director-general of Unesco, one of several UN bodies behind the report issued on World Water Day yesterday.

For decades, people have been using fresh water faster than Nature can replace it, contributi­ng in some regions to hunger, disease, conflict and migration.

Two-thirds of humanity currently live in zones that experience water scarcity at least one month a year.

Half of those people are in China and India.

Last year, the World Economic Forum’s annual survey of opinion leaders identified water crises as the top global risk over the next decade.

On current trends, the UN Environmen­t Programme forecasts that water demand – for industry, energy and an extra billion people – will increase 50% by 2030.

Global warming has already deepened droughts in many areas, and the planet will continue to heat up over the course of the century, even under optimistic scenarios.

“There is an absolute necessity to increase water security in order to overcome the challenges brought on by climate change and human influence,” said Benedito Braga, head of the World Water Council, an umbrella grouping of government­s, associatio­ns and research bodies.

Wastewater – runoff from agricultur­e, industry and expanding cities, especially in developing nations – is a major part of the problem.

That is especially true in poor countries where very little, if any, wastewater is treated or recycled.

High-income nations treat about 70% of the wastewater they gener- ate, a figure that drops to 38% for upper middle-income countries.

In low-income nations, only eight percent of industrial and municipal wastewater undergoes treatment of any kind.

More than 800,000 people die every year because of contaminat­ed drinking water, and not being able to properly wash their hands.

Water-related diseases claim nearly 3.5 million lives annually in Africa, Asia and Latin America – more than the global death toll from AIDS and car crashes combined.

Chemicals and nutrients from factories and farms create deadzones in rivers, lakes and coastal waters, and seep into aquifers.

The 200-page World Water Developmen­t Report details a fourpronge­d strategy for transformi­ng wastewater from a problem to a solution, said lead author Richard Connor of Unesco’s World Water Assessment Programme.

Besides reducing pollution at the source, policy initiative­s must shift focus to removing contaminan­ts from wastewater flows, reusing water, and recovering useful by-products, the report concludes.

 ??  ?? Limited supply: Two-thirds of humanity currently live in zones that experience water scarcity at least one month a year. Half of those people are in China and India. — Reuters
Limited supply: Two-thirds of humanity currently live in zones that experience water scarcity at least one month a year. Half of those people are in China and India. — Reuters

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