Decades of mismanagement of water resources, deforestation, and the fossil fuel-driven crisis of global warming have put 'unprecedented stress' on the Earth’s water systems, according to a new report, and have thrown the world’s hydrological cycle out of balance 'for the first time in human history.'
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Decades of mismanagement of water resources, deforestation, and the fossil
fuel-driven crisis of global warming have put “unprecedented stress” on the
Earth’s water systems, according to a new report, and have thrown the
world’s hydrological cycle out of balance “for the first time in human
history.”
The Global Commission on the Economics of Water, affiliated with the Dutch
government and comprised of global experts, published the study on Thursday,
warning that policymakers must urgently “reframe the hydrological cycle as a
global common good,” recognizing that it is “deeply interlinked with the
climate and biodiversity crises.”
The hydrological cycle, or water cycle, is the continuous circulation of
water between the planet’s oceans, land, and atmosphere. The experts
involved in the new report warn that rising temperatures and pollution —
driven by continued fossil fuel emissions and other industrial impacts — are
among the factors that are “undermining an equitable and sustainable future
for all” in terms of water access.
The commission said a “new economics of water” is needed, recognizing that
water connects countries and regions through atmospheric water flows as well
as bodies of water.
“We must reshape our shared relationship with water, across borders and
cultures, for sustainable, impactful, and just transitions,” the commission
said on social media.
Both freshwater and land ecosystems have been damaged by mismanagement and
“undervaluation of water around the world,” reads the report. “We can no
longer count on freshwater availability for our collective future.”
Already, more than 1,000 children die each day from illnesses related to a
lack of safe drinking water, and more than half of the world’s food
production takes place in areas where water supplies are expected to
decrease in the coming years.
“If this isn’t enough for the world to go into emergency mode, then what
is?” asked writer Matthew Todd of expected strain on food production. “Think
about what that means — billons potentially migrating, war, unprecedented
political instability.”
A new approach to water governance must be adopted, said the commission,
“from local to river basin to global, to ensure it is governed more
effectively and efficiently, delivers access and justice for all, and
sustains the earth’s ecosystems.”
Tharman Shanmugaratnam, president of Singapore and a co-chair of the
commission, told The Guardian that policymakers must “think radically about
how we are going to preserve the sources of fresh water, how we are going to
use it far more efficiently, and how we are going to be able to have access
to fresh water available to every community, including the vulnerable — in
other words, how we preserve equity [between rich and poor].”
The experts found that much of the $700 billion that goes to water and
agricultural subsidies annually is misdirected, pushing wealthier farmers to
use more water than they need while poorer communities and farmers have not
enough.
“Industry is getting a lot of the subsidy, and richer people. So what we
need are better targeted subsidies. We need to identify the poor people who
really need this,” Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, the director general of the World
Trade Organization and another co-chair of the commission, told The
Guardian.
The impact of continued stress of water resources could shrink wealthy
countries’ gross domestic product by an average of 8% by 2050 and that of
lower-income countries by up to 15%.
Stress on the planet’s water systems have particularly impacted “green
water” that is stored in soil, plants, and forests and ultimately evaporates
and becomes rainfall.
“Current policy tends to deal with the ‘blue’ water we can see — in rivers,
lakes, and aquifers — largely overlooking ‘green’ water,” reads the report.
“Intact ecosystems and lands managed in ways that do not adversely impact
their hydrological functioning are critical to securing terrestrial
rainfall. A stable supply of green water in soils is also crucial for carbon
sequestration.”
The degradation of freshwater systems, including the loss of moisture in
soil, has already contributed to “frequent and increasingly severe droughts,
floods, heatwaves, and wildfires, playing out across the globe.”
The commission mapped the “vast, interconnected network of atmospheric water
exchanges that span the entire planet” at an animated storytelling website
accompanying the report, providing a visual of how “green water flows
connect countries across the globe.”
“Managing water as a resource is more than a local matter,” said the
commission.
The report calls for partnerships to be forged between all stakeholders from
the local to global levels, aimed at completing five “missions that address
the most important and interconnected challenges of the global water
crisis”:
“The Chinese economy depends on sustainable forest management in Ukraine, Kazakhstan, and the Baltic region,” Johan Rockström, director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research and a co-chair of the commission, told The Guardian. “You can make the same case for Brazil supplying fresh water to Argentina. This interconnectedness just shows that we have to place fresh water in the global economy as a global common good.”