Aug 10, 2009

Water Scarcity Looms for over a BILLION

Water scarcity grows in urgency in many regions as population growth, climate change, pollution, lack of investment, and management failures restrict the amount of water available relative to demand.


The Stockholm International Water Institute calculated in 2008 that 1.4 billion people live in "closed basins"-regions where existing water cannot meet the agricultural, industrial, municipal, and environmental needs of all.


Their estimate is consistent with a 2007 Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) calculation that 1.2 billion people live in countries and regions that are water-scarce.

And the situation is projected to worsen rapidly: FAO estimates that the number of water-scarce will rise to 1.8 billion by 2025, particularly as population growth pushes many countries and regions into the scarcity column.

Water scarcity has many causes. Population growth is a major driver at the regional and global levels, but other factors play a large role locally. Pollution reduces the amount of usable water available to farmers, industry, and cities. The World Bank and the government of China have estimated, for instance, that 54 percent of the water in seven main rivers in China is unusable because of pollution. In addition, urbanization tends to increase domestic and industrial demand for water, as does rising incomes-two trends prominent in rapidly developing countries such as China, India, and Brazil.

Water Scarcity Figures
(
tables below and read more at www.worldwatch.org):

Table 1. Water Import Dependence, Selected Countries, 1997-2001

Country

Water Import

Dependence

(percent)

Country

Water Import

Dependence

(percent)

Netherlands

82

Egypt

19

Jordan

73

United States

19

United Kingdom

70

Australia

18

Japan

64

Russia

16

South Korea

62

Indonesia

10

Germany

53

Brazil

8

Italy

51

Thailand

8

France

37

China

7

Spain

36

Argentina

6

Mexico

30

Pakistan

5

South Africa

22

Bangladesh

3

Canada

20

India

2

Source: Chapagain and Hoekstra, Water International, March 2008.

 

Table 2. Water Required to Produce Selected Foods

Product

Embedded Water Content

(cubic meters per ton)

Beef

13,500

Pork

4,600

Poultry

4,100

Soybean

2,750

Eggs

2,700

Rice

1,400

Wheat

1,160

Milk

790

Source: World Water Council.


Table 3. Water Consumption by Energy Type in the United States

Energy Type

Water Consumed

 (cubic meters per megawatt-hour)

Solar

0.0001

Wind

0.0001

Gas

1

Coal

2

Nuclear

2.5

Oil

4

Hydropower

68

Biofuel (first generation)

178

Source: Morrison et al.

Complete trends will be available with full endnote referencing, Excel spreadsheets, and customizable presentation-ready charts as part of our new subscription service, Vital Signs Online, slated to launch this fall.