Experts warn of rise in water scarcitybased conflicts
BOGOTA: From Yemen to India, and parts of Central America to the African Sahel, about a quarter of the world’s people face extreme water shortages that are fuelling conflict, social unrest and migration, water experts said this week.
With the world’s population rising and climate change bringing more erratic rainfall, including severe droughts, competition for scarcer water is growing, they said, with serious consequences.
‘‘If there is no water, people will start to move.
‘‘If there is no water, politicians are going to try and get their hands on it and they might start to fight over it,’’ the Netherlands’ foreign ministry head of international cooperation Kitty van der Heijden warned.
‘‘It’s threats like these that keep me up at night,’’ the diplomat told a webinar hosted by the World Resources Institute (WRI), a United Statesbased research group.
According to the WRI, 17 countries face ‘‘extremely high’’ levels of water stress, while more than two billion people live in countries experiencing ‘‘high’’ water stress.
One in four children worldwide will be living in areas of extremely high water stress by 2040, researchers estimated.
In terms of water availability, ‘‘at some point we are going to hit the wall, and that wall might be different in different places’’,
Heijden said.
Climate change is compounding the challenge, she said, with cities such as India’s Chennai and South Africa’s Cape Town battling severe water shortages in recent years related in part to erratic rainfall.
Disputes over water had for millennia served as a flashpoint, driving political instability and conflict, the water experts said.
Californiabased Pacific Institute cofounder Peter Gleick said ‘‘the risks of waterrelated disputes are growing . . . in part because of growing scarcity over water’’.
The institute jointly published the report with WRI and The Water, Peace and Security Partnership.
But as water scarcity grows, water systems are also increasingly becoming targets in other types of conflicts, said Gleick, whose institute has compiled a chronology of water conflicts that dates back 5000 years.
In Yemen, years of fighting has destroyed water infrastructure, leaving millions without safe water to drink or grow crops. Wells and other water facilities also have been targets in Somalia, Iraq, Syria and other countries, he said.
Recurring droughts in parts of Central America and the African Sahel in recent years have triggered migration as subsistence farmers, whose harvests have been decimated by low rainfall, seek refuge and jobs in other countries.
One key to tackling water scarcity was boosting investment in more sparing use of water in agriculture, an industry that absorbed more than twothirds of the water used by people each year, the experts said.
Farmers in some droughthit areas were switching to more efficient sprinkler or drip irrigation, and were using remote monitoring tools to make sure they applied just the right amount of moisture at the right time and in the right place, they said.
Conserving forests, wetlands and watersheds, including those around cities, could help absorb rainfall, helping stem crop losses from flooding and drought.
WRI head of global and national water initiatives Charles Iceland said: ‘‘Where possible such green infrastructure should be used with or instead of traditional physical infrastructure like dams, levies (or) reservoirs.’’
That was both because it could cost less and because it encouraged preservation of ecosystems,
Iceland said.
As water became more precious, communities living in waterscarce hot spots must be included in making decisions about its use and management, the experts said.
‘‘Only in that way can we make real progress,’’ Heijden said, noting that women and youth needed to have a strong voice in those decisions.
She said a range of options were available to deal with worsening water scarcity, but getting them into practice could be a challenge.
‘‘We know the many solutions that are there, but to actually implement them we still face many barriers, be they technical, financial or in terms of political will.’’ — Thomson Reuters Foundation