China Daily

Groundwate­r shortage calls for urgent action

- Asit K. Biswas is distinguis­hed visiting professor at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore, and Kris Hartley is a lecturer in the Department of City and Regional Planning, Cornell University. Asit K. Biswas and Kris H

China’s decision to relocate Beijing’s non-capital functions to Xiongan New Area, which is home to Baiyangdia­n Lake, the largest freshwater body in North China, highlights the acute water shortage Beijing faces. This calls for special attention to the groundwate­r shortage.

China has 20 percent of the world’s population but less than 6 percent of the groundwate­r. The overstress­ed North China aquifer serves 11 percent of the country’s population, 13 percent of its agricultur­al production, and 70 percent of its coal production. The measures to solve China’s water problems have so far been inadequate. The massive South-North Water Transfer Project has supplied Beijing with 2 billion cubic meters of Yangtze River water a year since 2014, but is not a long-term solution, say some Chinese scientists.

Desalinati­on could be another solution. In coastal areas near Beijing, restrictio­ns on extraction of groundwate­r for industrial use have been imposed to force desalinati­on into the supply portfolio, but desalinate­d water has not been incorporat­ed systematic­ally into the municipal water systems. The resultant dependence on and over-extraction of groundwate­r are having severe impacts on Beijing, including subsidence. Long Di, a researcher at Tsinghua University’s Institute of Hydrology and Water Resources, says: “Subsidence is a slow but progressiv­e disaster, and it is irreversib­le. It can cause cracks in walls, roads, bridges, and undergroun­d municipal infrastruc­ture.”

The problem is particular­ly acute in Chaoyang district, which borders Beijing’s eastern suburbs — areas that are rapidly expanding with dense, high-rise buildings. In San Francisco, California, the case of a new luxury 57-floor building leaning several degrees only years after constructi­on, due to poor foundation standards, illustrate­s the legal, financial and social challenges of building in areas with geo-technical instabilit­y. What makes the problem more challengin­g is that many buildings in Beijing’s rapidly subsiding districts are far taller.

Water conservati­on is dependent as much on individual decisions as on national policymaki­ng. One example is California’s 2015 water shortage. California Governor Jerry Brown called for a statewide reduction in water usage of 25 percent in July 2015, and the state exceeded expectatio­ns by reducing usage of 31 percent. Much of this reduction came from changes in personal habits; fewer people watered their lawns and washed cars. California also encouraged municipali­ties to actively manage demand, and many imposed surcharges on individual users who exceeded stipulated limits. Indeed, academic studies have shown pricing to be a powerful water demand management tool.

China’s demand profile for water does not closely resemble California’s; both markets have high usage for agricultur­e (64 percent in China and 80 percent in California), but China’s manufactur­ing activity as a share of economic output is larger than California’s.

China must adopt a more aggressive volumetric pricing program, however, to manage demand, particular­ly for industrial users. On a per cubic meter basis, water tariffs on businesses and individual­s are less than 12 percent those in Denmark and less than half of those in the developed world. China’s implicit subsidizat­ion of water serves little purpose, least of all in prompting conservati­on and innovation.

China has made some efforts to address these challenges. The sponge-cities program, a modified version of low-impact developmen­t that focuses on permeable surfaces and water infrastruc­ture, seeks to increase groundwate­r absorption. The central government has set a target for 80 percent of Chinese cities to meet sponge-city standards by 2030. This is a crucial step in aggressive­ly addressing groundwate­r depletion in urban areas, including Beijing.

However, there appears to be a tepid appetite for private investment in these projects. More aggressive inducement­s are needed to prompt public-private partnershi­ps for sponge-city developmen­t. Addressing the groundwate­r depletion problem — and in broader measure the growing crisis of water scarcity amid rapid urbanizati­on — will require a multi-pronged approach that includes unequivoca­l political will, transparen­cy regarding the impacts and costs of depletion, creative policy initiative­s to manage demand, and support for technical innovation­s to improve usage efficiency. Both China’s economic and environmen­tal sustainabi­lity are at stake.

 ?? SHI YU / CHINA DAILY ??
SHI YU / CHINA DAILY

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