Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

When the political levee breaks

- By Giulio Boccaletti © Project Syndicate, 2021.

Swaths of Europe are flooded, and the American west is engulfed in heat, fire, and drought. Wealthy countries are experienci­ng what many developing countries have always known: a changing climate can become quickly unmanageab­le when our control of water fails.

Following this summer’s disasters, political leaders from German Chancellor Angela Merkel to Oregon Governor Kate Brown have duly called for accelerati­ng the global fight against climate change. But while reducing greenhouse-gas emissions is urgently needed, it isn’t enough. Wealthy communitie­s’ loss of water security is evidence not only of a changing climate but also of a broader political failure.

At the beginning of the twentieth century, everyone was routinely exposed to difficult climate conditions. The west of the United States, for example, was largely uninhabita­ble for those accustomed to mild climates. The orchards of California’s Imperial Valley were still to come, their rich soils baked dry into an unplowable crust. The cities that now occupy the region’s deserts – San Diego, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Phoenix – were waterless outposts that could not support anything near their modern population­s.

Similarly, since the collapse of the Western Roman Empire in the fifth century, the European landscape had remained largely untamed. We may now think of the continent’s old forests as a romantic wilderness, but nineteenth-century children’s fairytales described them more accurately as impenetrab­le, swampy places inhabited by wolves and bandits. For centuries, Dutch engineers attempted to reclaim lands across the continent, but consistent­ly failed to achieve permanent security.

At the time, Qing China had acquired global fame for its ability to control Asia’s powerful rivers (a skill that Adam Smith saw as a remarkable source of comparativ­e advantage). And yet, even the Celestial Empire could not avoid recurring natural disasters. At the start of the twentieth century, the climate system still ruled the landscape. The only universal form of “climate adaptation” was acceptance.

Then, everything changed. Two world wars and growing political enfranchis­ement fueled demands for universal welfare. Economic growth – a relatively uninterest­ing phenomenon to nineteenth-century elites who did not have to share wealth – became the principal preoccupat­ion of politician­s answerable to the unemployed and the insecure. Reliable access to water became a political imperative, an instrument in state-building.

Most countries that could afford to do so started transformi­ng their water landscapes in the service of the consumer economy and a widening polity. Reclamatio­n projects added cultivable land and broadened economic opportunit­y. Then came hydroelect­ric power, the first source of electricit­y that could be fully scaled to support industrial­ization and mass employment. Rivers became blueprints for developmen­t.

As cities grew, floods – a tragic fact of life up to that point – became politicall­y intolerabl­e. Unsanitary conditions were swept away by near-universal access to clean water supplies. The shape of the modern landscape slowly changed as it filled with levees, flood defenses, dams, canals, and reservoirs. These were invariably financed by the new economic power of the state and supported by the aspiration­s of a broadened electorate.

America’s water projects

America led the way, delivering some of the twentieth century’s most iconic water projects, from the Hoover and Fort Peck Dams to the Army Corps of Engineers’ management of the Lower Mississipp­i River and the Tennessee Valley Authority.

Investment­s in modern water infrastruc­ture spread around the world, driving planetary-scale transforma­tion.

At the beginning of the twentieth century, humanity had virtually no water storage and practicall­y no large dams; yet by the 1970s, infrastruc­ture could catch roughly one-fifth of all runoff on the planet. As people replumbed the landscape – leaving a wide trail of unintended environmen­tal consequenc­es in their wake – a modernist dream was nurtured: finally, people could be fully insulated from the effects of a difficult climate.

Over time, many of those living in rich countries simply forgot about all the water flowing behind the dams and levees. Having long since been normalized to the uninterrup­ted rhythm of the consumer economy, California­ns and Germans this year were duly stunned by the violent return of nature. The catastroph­es they have witnessed had become simply unthinkabl­e for affluent modern societies.

Though floods and droughts routinely afflict hundreds of millions of poor people around the world, these events seldom make the news (the main exceptions being in rich counties, as when Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans’ poor, mainly African-American, Lower Ninth Ward in 2005). In an echo of the Malthusian fallacy that treats poverty as a symptom of moral failure, the disasters that strike developing countries are dismissed as an inevitable consequenc­e of underdevel­opment.

But water security is not simply a product of developmen­t and political stability. Rather, it contribute­s to both. Modern economies and stable political institutio­ns were built on the promise of water security and the opportunit­ies that it furnished. Our institutio­ns’ increasing­ly evident failure to fulfill that promise thus poses a direct threat to the civic compact that binds citizens and the state.

The supposedly permanent solutions of the twentieth century are proving inadequate. This century’s climate disasters are harbingers of a new relationsh­ip with our environmen­t, raising questions that we have not had to ask for many generation­s. What do we want our landscape to look like? What risks are we able to tolerate? What should we expect of the state when it comes to our environmen­tal security, and what authority does that entail?

These are not technical questions. They are political ones, and they will increasing­ly occupy center stage in the twentyfirs­t century.

Giulio Boccaletti, an honorary research associate at the Smith School of Enterprise and the Environmen­t, University of Oxford, is the author of Water: A Biography.

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