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<text id=90TT2210>
<link 93TG0068>
<title>
Aug. 20, 1990: The Last Drops
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Aug. 20, 1990 Showdown
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ENVIRONMENT, Page 58
The Last Drops
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Population growth and development have depleted and polluted the
world's water supply, raising the risk of starvation,
epidemics and even wars
</p>
<p>By Eugene Lindon--Reported by Andrea Dabrowski/Mexico City,
Anita Pratap/New Delhi and Amany Radwan/Amman
</p>
<p> Swaminathan Asokan dreams of water. It gushes out of a giant
tap and fills bucket after bucket. But then he wakes up--to
a nightmare. For at Asokan's house in Madras, India's fourth
largest city, there is no water. The tap has long been dry. So
he must get up in the dark of night and, laden with plastic
pails, take a five-minute walk down the street to a public tap.
Since the water flows only between 4 a.m. and 6 a.m., Asokan,
34, a white-collar worker at a finance company, tries to be
there by 3:30 a.m. to get a good place in line. His reward:
five buckets that must last the entire day.
</p>
<p> Compared with many of his countrymen, Asokan is fortunate.
At least 8,000 Indian villages have no local water supply at
all. Their residents must hike long distances to the nearest
well or river. In many parts of the country, water is
contaminated by sewage and industrial waste, exposing those who
drink it to disease.
</p>
<p> The sad state of India's water supply is just one sign of
what could become a global disaster. From the slums of Mexico
to the overburdened farms of China, human populations are
outstripping the limited stock of fresh water. Mankind is
poisoning and exhausting the precious fluid that sustains all
life.
</p>
<p> In the Soviet Union, the mismanagement of land around the
Aral Sea has cut it off from its sources of water, causing the
volume of the once giant lake to shrink by two-thirds in 30
years. Now storms of salt and pesticides swirl up from the
receding shoreline, contaminating the land and afflicting
millions of Uzbeks with gastritis, typhoid and throat cancer.
In Beijing, one-third of the city's wells have gone dry, and
the water table drops by as much as 2 meters (2.2 yards) a
year. In the Western U.S., four years of drought have left
municipalities and agricultural interests tussling over
diminishing water stocks. Says Ivan Restrepo, head of the
Center for Ecodevelopment in Mexico, where as many as 30
million people do not have safe drinking water: "We've been
enduring a crisis for several years now, but it is in this
decade that it will explode."
</p>
<p> Camouflaged by its very familiarity, the water problem has
crept up on a world distracted by fears of global warming and
other emergent environmental threats. Yet water could be the
first resource that puts a limit on human population and
economic growth. Shortfalls of water will mean shortfalls of
food, since up to three-quarters of the fresh water that
humanity uses goes for agriculture. Moreover, contaminated
drinking water in heavily populated areas endangers the health
of hundreds of millions of people. According to the United
Nations, 40,000 children die every day, many of them the victims
of the water crisis.
</p>
<p> At the moment, countries are poised to go to war over oil,
but in the near future, water could be the catalyst for armed
conflict. Israel and Jordan, Egypt and Ethiopia, and India and
Bangladesh are but a few of the neighboring nations at odds
over rivers and lakes. Warns Arnon Sofer, professor of
geography at Israel's Haifa University: "Wars over water might
erupt in the Middle East in the '90s when states try to control
each other's supplies."
</p>
<p> Whatever the human consequences of the crisis, it has an
even greater effect on many other living things. Fish, birds
and countless creatures are crowded out, marooned or poisoned
as industry, agriculture and municipalities reroute rivers, dry
up wetlands, dump waste and otherwise disrupt the normal
functioning of delicate ecosystems. The world is learning that
there are limits to mankind's ability to move water from one
place to another without seriously upsetting the balance of
nature.
</p>
<p> The idea of a global shortage seems incredible when 70% of
the earth's surface is covered by H2O. But 98% of that water
is salty, making it unusable for drinking or agriculture.
Desalinization is technically feasible, but it is far too
expensive to use anywhere except in an ultra-rich, sparsely
populated country like Saudi Arabia. Other options, like towing
icebergs from the poles, are also beyond the means of poor
nations.
</p>
<p> The scarcity of fresh water for agriculture makes famines
more likely every year. The world consumes more food than it
produces, and yet there are few places to turn for additional
cropland. Only by drawing on international stockpiles of grain
have poorer countries averted widespread starvation. But those
supplies are being depleted. From 1987 to 1989, the world's
stock of grain fell from a 101-day surplus to a 54-day one. A
drought in the U.S. breadbasket could rapidly lead to a global
food calamity.
</p>
<p> Even if rainfall stays at normal levels, current world food
production will be difficult to maintain, much less increase.
The food supply has kept pace with population growth only
because the amount of land under irrigation has doubled in the
past three decades. Now, however, agriculture is losing
millions of hectares of this land to the effects of improper
watering.
</p>
<p> Without adequate drainage, continuous irrigation gradually
destroys a piece of land--and any streams or rivers near it--through a process called salinization. As the heat of the
sun evaporates irrigation water, salts are left behind. The
water also flushes additional salts out of soils with high
concentrations of minerals, leaving them to dry on the surface
into a cakelike residue or to dissolve in groundwater and
poison plant roots.
</p>
<p> History shows that such environmental destruction can have
far-reaching consequences. The salinization of irrigated land
led to the fall of Mesopotamia and Babylon, and perhaps even
the Mayan civilization of Central America. Similar pressures
are at work today. Sandra Postel of Worldwatch Institute
estimates that 60 million hectares (nearly 150 million acres)
of irrigated land worldwide have been damaged by salt buildup.
</p>
<p> Human activities have also disrupted the delicate natural
systems that maintain water supplies. To obtain wood and clear
land for homes and farms, mankind is chopping down forests at
an unprecedented rate. But vegetation traps water, reducing
runoff and replenishing groundwater supplies. Throughout the
world, tree cutting has led to floods, mud slides and soil
erosion during rainy seasons and acute water shortages during
dry periods.
</p>
<p> Deforestation can set in motion forces that reduce the
amount of rainfall in a given area. In a rain forest, for
example, as much as half the moisture settles on trees and
quickly evaporates into the sky, only to precipitate again in
a continuous cycle. Thus when trees are cut down, rainfall may
diminish.
</p>
<p> Even in dryer regions sparse shrubs can help maintain
rainfall. Some scientists argue that once ground cover is
stripped, the land hardens and evaporates less moisture into
the air. At the same time, the naked soil reflects more
sunlight, triggering atmospheric processes that reduce rainfall
by drawing dryer air into the area.
</p>
<p> The result is desertification, a gradual conversion of
marginal land into wasteland. This process is often driven by
population pressures, which force people to work lands
unsuitable for agriculture. In sub-Saharan Africa, for
instance, settlers move into an area when it is wet and green,
and then stay and remove the ground cover when the inevitable
drought returns. Without a green barrier to stop them, sand
dunes march inexorably forward.
</p>
<p> While no place is safe from the effects of the water crisis,
Egypt, in particular, faces hard times. The country's
population of 55 million is growing by 1 million every nine
months. Already the people must import 65% of their food, and
the situation could grow far worse. The flow of the Nile,
Egypt's only major water supply, will be reduced in coming
years as upstream neighbors Ethiopia and Sudan divert more of
the river's waters. Egypt's only practical course is to brake
population growth and reduce the enormous amount of water
wasted through inefficient irrigation techniques.
</p>
<p> Competition for water is especially fierce between Israel
and Jordan, which must share the Jordan River basin. Many towns
in Jordan receive water only two times a week, and the country
must double its supply within 20 years just to keep up with
population growth. "We are cornered," admits Munther Haddadin,
a Jordanian development official. With time running out, Jordan
hopes to draw additional reserves from the Yarmuk river.
Israel, however, will fight any plans for use of the river that
do not give guarantees of access to the Yarmuk waters that the
country currently uses.
</p>
<p> In the grip of a three-year drought, Israel too is far from
secure, despite its formidable conservation technologies. An
expected 750,000 Soviet emigres will probably settle in the
cities, where the use of pure water is the highest. At the same
time, 750,000 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip face what Zemah
Ishai, Israel's water commissioner, calls a "catastrophe"
because of overpumping and contamination of groundwater.
</p>
<p> A decade ago, a government study in China estimated that the
nation's water resources might support only 700 million people.
That was alarming, since the population had already reached 900
million. Unable to increase the supply, the Politburo took the
simpler expedient of revising the study to conclude that there
was enough water for 1.1 billion people. As the population
continues to grow and now surpasses the 1.1 billion mark, China
has gradually increased the numbers in the study.
</p>
<p> Chinese leaders, aware of the true severity of the crisis,
have at last begun to focus the nation's scientific talent on
the water issue. The country has been working to develop
salt-tolerant and drought-resistant crops, and it has begun to
have some success in reclaiming salt-damaged land.
</p>
<p> In the West the most troubled dry spot is Mexico, where a
government report asserts that "water will be a limiting factor
for the country's future development." The demands of Mexico
City's 20 million people are causing the level of their main
aquifer to drop as much as 3.4 meters (11 ft.) annually. Water
subsidies encourage the wealthy and middle classes to waste
municipal supplies, while the poor are forced to buy from
piperos, entrepreneurs who fix prices according to demand.
Belatedly, the government has begun to establish a more sensible
system of tariffs as well as promote water-saving devices like
low-flush toilets.
</p>
<p> Despite the global breadth of the water crisis, the
situation is not completely hopeless. In industrial nations the
revitalized environmental movement has spawned a fresh
offensive against pollution. Jan Dogterom, who runs a
consulting firm in the Netherlands, represents a new breed of
detective hired by governments to track down the culprits who
contaminate waterways. Faced with the knowledge that toxins
can be traced back to their source, many companies comply
readily in cleanup efforts. Says Dogterom: "It is my
honest-to-God conviction that the West European rivers will be
clean in 50 years, and the East European rivers will soon
follow."
</p>
<p> The water-supply picture may not be entirely bleak. Mohamed
El-Ashry of the World Resources Institute estimates that around
the world 65% to 70% of the water people use is lost to
evaporation, leaks and other inefficiencies. The U.S. has a
slightly better 50% efficiency, and El-Ashry believes it is
economically feasible to reduce losses to 15%.
</p>
<p> Government officials and businesses are looking for ways to
reuse waste water. With the aid of advanced technology, even
highly contaminated water can be made drinkable again. Alcoa
has just begun to market a new claylike material called
Sorbplus that helps clean water by adsorbing toxic materials.
</p>
<p> Most tantalizing of all is the possibility that there are
great, undiscovered reservoirs throughout the globe. Speaking
in Cairo last June at a water summit organized by the
Washington-based Global Strategy Council, Farouk El-Baz of
Boston University raised hopes among African nations when he
announced that an analysis of remote sensing data has revealed
unsuspected supplies of underground water in the dryest part
of the Egyptian Sahara. El-Baz believes there may be twice as
much water stored underground worldwide as previously assumed.
</p>
<p> New supplies could take some pressure off rivers and lakes
and would be a temporary godsend to millions of people. But if
societies returned to business as usual, this bounty would only
postpone the day of reckoning for humans and all other species.
Humanity has long deluded itself into thinking that water
shortages merely reflect temporary problems of distribution.
Both industrial and developing nations are finally realizing
that the world's fresh water is a finite and vulnerable
resource, an irreplaceable commodity that must be respected and
preserved.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>