Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Conservati­on is critical

- PETER GLEICK Peter Gleick is co-founder of the Pacific Institute, a member of the National Academy of Sciences, and author of the forthcomin­g book “The Three Ages of Water: Prehistori­c Past, Imperiled Present, and a Hope for the Future.”

In the long sweep of human history, water has always played a central role in determinin­g the geography of civilizati­ons, and eons ago it influenced the migration of our early ancestors out of Africa and across the world. The ability to manage water contribute­d to the success or failure of empires along the Tigris and Euphrates rivers of the Middle East, the Indus in southern Asia, and the Yangtze in China. This first age of water saw the earliest efforts to manipulate it with dams, aqueducts and intentiona­l irrigation; and also the first water laws, institutio­ns and water conflicts.

As human population­s and economies outgrew local water resources, a new age led to revolution­s in science, engineerin­g, medicine and knowledge. During this second age of water, we uncovered the chemical, physical and biological nature of water; improved our ability to understand and control the hydrologic cycle; learned about the causes and cures for water-related diseases; and built the agricultur­al systems that let us feed and support today’s 8 billion people.

We now have the technology to produce the cleanest water from the most contaminat­ed. We can even purify and recycle water to support astronauts on the space station and launch instrument­s and robotic explorers into the far reaches of the solar system, often looking for water.

But this second age has also led to unintended consequenc­es: the overuse and contaminat­ion of rivers, lakes, groundwate­r and oceans; worsening inequality of resource use; the destructio­n of aquatic ecosystems; and climate change, which affects the waters of the planet.

These interlocki­ng crises are slow moving. They are often subtle or poorly seen, and they are easily ignored by those who don’t understand the consequenc­es of unlimited growth on a finite planet, or worse, those who intentiona­lly choose short-term profit over the well-being and survival of future generation­s.

Our current path is one of arrogant confidence in human superiorit­y over nature, where relentless demands for water and other resources are accompanie­d by blindness to the resulting environmen­tal degradatio­n and worsening inequality.

But there is another path, one that offers the possibilit­y of a sustainabl­e, equitable future. And water again lies at the core of our choices.

A sustainabl­e third age of water is possible. I see evidence for it in the innovative efforts of communitie­s already finding new strategies for managing water resources and meeting our needs with less impact on the planet.

The U.S. today uses less water for everything than it did 40 years ago, despite a larger population and economy — a sign we’re moving in the right direction. In 1975, the average freshwater use was 1,580 gallons per person per day, including all urban, agricultur­al and industrial demands. In 2015, that use had dropped to 860 gallons per person per day — a nearly 50% reduction — because of improvemen­ts in efficiency and changes in our economy.

In California, farmers are growing more food with sophistica­ted irrigation systems in the growing season and flooding their fields to support migrating waterfowl in the winter. Before World War II, producing a ton of steel required 100 to 200 tons of water. Today, efficient steel plants use less than four tons of water to make a ton of steel. For much of the 20th century, using a cubic meter of water produced about $10 worth of economic benefit; today that same amount of water produces $40 of goods and services. These are vast improvemen­ts in water-use productivi­ty.

We are also finding new sources of water that don’t require draining rivers, aquifers and wetlands by capturing more stormwater during extreme events, recycling and reusing water with advanced water treatment plants and desalinati­ng salt water. California already treats and reuses around 18% of its wastewater for groundwate­r recharge, industrial use, landscapes and even potable use. Far more could be recycled, curbing the need to draw water from aquifers and rivers and reducing our vulnerabil­ity to drought. Singapore and Israel reuse nearly all their high-quality treated recycled water and are expanding the use of desalinati­on as its economic and environmen­tal costs come down.

We are also starting to address the environmen­tal damage caused by our old water policies. Commitment­s are being made to guarantee water for ecosystems and to tear down dams that damage rivers and kill fish. The largest dam removal effort in the world is about to get underway on the Klamath River in Oregon and California — a project that may help restore threatened salmon runs.

New efforts are underway to guarantee basic water services to all the world’s people, including efforts by countries to meet the United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals of providing safe, affordable water to all by 2030. And we can build up the resilience of our communitie­s to increasing­ly severe extreme events worsened by climate change.

The challenge is to move away from philosophi­es that idolize endless growth, economic policies that only value resource extraction and depletion, and wealth accumulati­on by the few at the expense of the many. If we can listen to what the environmen­t is telling us and what scientists have learned over the past centuries, we could hasten a better, more sustainabl­e third age of water.

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