THE FIRST QUESTION
people tend to ask about water is this: if water is a renewable resource if it flows in a cycle, like we learned in elementary school then how can it be wasted?
You probably know that only 2.5% of the earths water is freshwater, and that most of that is frozen in the ice caps. The rest of that water is largely soil moisture or trapped underground, leaving a fraction of 1% of the worlds water available for human use. When we talk about running out of water, we are talking about a supply-and-demand problem (as with oil, our other dwindling resource). We have an increasing demand for water, as population rises. As water advocate Sandra Postel puts it, That means supplies per person, a broad indicator of water scarcity, drop as population grows.1 So, if youre one of the five thousand people that moves each month to Las Vegas, youre increasing the demand in an area with an already low supply. Much of our water, especially in arid lands, depends on aquifers (underwater reserves of water). Due to high demand, these aquifers are being pumped faster than rainfall can recharge them. Consider: the famous Ogalalla aquifer, which runs from Texas to South Dakota, is being pumped eight times faster than nature can refill it. So while demand is increase, supply is decreasing.
wait... how can the supply decrease if water flows in a cycle?
Along with the problem that were using more than nature can recharge (like with the aquifers), theres the fact that weve polluted a lot of the available water. For example, in Poland, 75% of the rivers are too polluted for even industrial uses. But on a more complex level, our general activities have destroyed the earths capacity to receive, absorb, and store water, as activist Vandana Shiva explains. Deforestation and mining have destroyed the ability of water catchments to retain water... monoculture agriculture and forestry have sucked ecosystems dry...[and] the growing use of fossil fuels had led to atmospheric pollution and climate change, responsible for recurrent floods, cyclones, and droughts.2
So there is a cycle of renewal at work, but this delicate cycle depends on a lot of complex factors, including rainfall, soil, weather, and river flows all of which humans have impacted, to our own misfortune. Weve cut down half the planets forests, so theres less soil and earth to stop rainfall from going directly to the rivers. Weve dammed up the rivers, which interrupts their complex ecosystems in the U.S., only 2 percent of the rivers arent dammed and some rivers, like the Colorado and Rio Grande, hardly even make it to the sea. So while the earth cant run out of water humans can run out of freshwater, and we are. For us, water is a finite resource.
And for many people in the world, access to this finite resource is a matter of survival. Diseases like cholera and dysentery are caused by unsafe water, and the number one cause of infant death worldwide is unsanitary water. In places like Haiti and Gambia, people only have 3 liters of water per day here, in the U.S., we use 500 liters per day. The average toilet made before the mid-1990s uses 23 liters in a single flush. It is important to understand this vast inequality as we explore the issue of water in our world. As Peter Glieck puts it, Its a human tragedy, which could explode into a human bloodbath.3 For us, the water crisis is coming; for the 2.2 billion people that live below a minimum level of water need,* its already here.
* This 50-liter requirement of minimum need is based on the following: 5L for drinking, 10L for cooking, 15L for bathing, and 20L for sanitation. Obviously, many people get much less than this.
click here to read the rest of this article: you'll learn about where our water goes, where water conflict is occurring and will occur, how corporations are trying to control drinking water... and why you should care about these things.
resources for more information
water resources: general
-
The World's Water
-
This site from the Pacific Institute, which has a chronology of water conflicts starting at 3,000 BC, is "a site dedicated to providing up-to-date water information, data, and web connections to organizations, institutions, and individuals working on a wide range of global freshwater problems and solutions."
-
Water for People, Water for Life
- The U.N.'s report on world water.
- the Worldwatch Institute
-
Publishes updates on how planetary sustems are doing, including freshwater systems.
-
Water Resources Guide
- Links and articles from Yes magazine.
-
EPA Local Drinking Water Information
-
Learn about your local drinking water from the EPA.
-
Water Conservation Tips
-
Lists 100 ways to conserve water.
-
Water Wars Part I: The Middle East
- Series from the BBC.
Aral Sea
-
The Aral Sea Tragedy
- BBC article, 2000
-
South Aral Sea Gone in 15 Years'
-
New Scientist article, 2003
-
Aral Sea
-
another report on the Aral Sea
Oceans: Dead Zone, Gyre
-
"Trashed", from Natural History, and
"Trashing the Oceans", from U.S. News and World Report
-
Articles on the North Pacific gyre
-
Dead Waters
- Science News article about the Dead Zone in the Gulf of Mexico, 2004
-
Gulf of Mexico 'Dead Zone' is Size of New Jersey
-
Article from National Geographic, 2005
water corporatization issues: general
-
Polaris Institute
-
"...retooling citizen movements for democratic social change in an age of corporate-driven globalization." Features an expose about bottled water, as well as general information on the corporatization of the world, GATS, the military-industrial complex, etc.
-
Sierra Club
-
Find out about corporate water privatization from the Sierra Club; site features information about bottled water and more. This is their clean water page.
-
The Water Barons
- A report on water corporations.
-
Public Citizen's Water For All Campagign
-
A campaign to keep water as a public trust, including an activist's guide to fighting water privatization in one's community.
-
Globalization in Our Local Economy
-
Comprehensive article on privatization from ZNet
-
Building Water Democracy : People's victory against Coca-Cola in Plachimada
-
Vandana Shiva article on the fight against Coca-Cola in India
-
Forget OPEC. The next cartel may export drinking water.
-
"Already, companies are locking up resources and selling abroad..." from the Christian Science Monitor.
Bolivia: Cochabamba & Beyond
-
Leasing the Rain
-
Article from the New Yorker, 2002: "The world is running out of fresh water, and the fight to control it has begun." For related info, check out PBS Frontline's site and links.
-
Blog from Bolivia
-
This blog from the Democracy Center is an interesting up-to-date account of how things are going in Bolivia.
recommended books
Barlow, Maude, and Tony Clarke. Blue Gold: The Fight to Stop the Corporate Theft of the World's Water. New Press: 2002.
Postel, Sandra. Last Oasis: Facing Water Scarcity. New York: WW Norton, 1992, updated 1997.
Rothfeder, Jeffrey. Every Drop for Sale. New York: Putnam, 2001.
Shiva, Vandana. Water Wars: Privatization, Pollution, and Profit. Cambridge: South End Press, 2002.