| WATERWill There Be Enough? | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| WATER MAKES THE WORLD GO ROUND | |||
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Practically all industrial processes consume large quantities of water.
Agriculture may be just as demanding, especially if livestock is raised in semiarid regions of the earth.
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If you live in an industrialized country, you have no doubt noticed that factories cluster around important rivers. The reason is simple. Industry needs water to produce practically everything, from computers to paper clips. Food processing also uses a surprising amount of water. Power stations have an insatiable appetite for water and are located alongside lakes or rivers.
The need for water in agriculture is even greater. In many places rainfall is either too little or too unreliable to guarantee a good harvest, so irrigation seemed to be the ideal solution for feeding a hungry planet. As a result of dependence on irrigated crops, agriculture takes a major part of the planet's supply of fresh water.
In addition, domestic water consumption has grown. During the 1990's, a staggering 900 million new city dwellers needed decent sanitation and access to safe water. The traditional sources of water, such as rivers and wells, are no longer sufficient for large cities. Mexico City, for example, now has to pipe in water from more than 70 miles [125 km] away and pump it over a range of mountains that rise 4,000 feet [1,200 meters] above the city's elevation. The situation, says Dieter Kraemer in his report Water: The Life-Giving Source, is "kind of like an octopus; arms going out of the city to try to get water."
Thus, industry, agriculture, and urban areas have all been clamoring for more water. And many of their demands have been met, for the time being, by drawing on the planet's reservesgroundwater. Aquifers are one of the earth's main deposits of fresh water. But they are not inexhaustible. Such water deposits are like money in the bank. You can't keep on withdrawing it if you make few deposits. Sooner or later, the day of reckoning will come.
| WHERE IS THE WATER USED? | ||
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Groundwater is the water supply we tap into when we sink a well. The United Nations Children's Fund report Groundwater: The Invisible and Endangered Resource calculates that half the water used for domestic purposes and for irrigating crops comes from this source. Since groundwater is usually less polluted than surface water, it also provides much of our drinking water, both in cities and in the countryside. If withdrawals were moderate, groundwater supplies would remain constant, since they are regularly renewed by rain that slowly seeps through to these underground reservoirs. But for decades mankind has been siphoning off much more water than the natural water cycle can replace.
The result is that the level of the groundwater gets farther from the surface, and it becomes either uneconomical or impractical to dig deep enough to reach it. When the well runs dry, economic and human disaster results. In India such tragedies have already begun to occur. Since the food for a billion people who live in the central plains of China and India depends on water stored underground, the outlook is alarming.
Depletion of groundwater supplies is further aggravated by contamination. Agricultural fertilizers, human and animal wastes, and industrial chemicals are all finding their way into the groundwater. "Once an aquifer is contaminated, remedial measures can be long and costly, even impossible," explains a report published by the World Meteorological Organization. "The slow penetration of pollutants has been called a 'chemical time bomb.' It threatens humankind."
The final irony is that water pumped out of the underground aquifers may end up ruining the very land it was intended to irrigate. Much of the irrigated land in the arid or semiarid countries of the world now suffers from salinization. In India and the United Statestwo of the world's major food-producing countries25 percent of irrigated land has already been seriously damaged.
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| Millions of gallons of water are wasted because of broken water mains and faucets that are left running | |||
Despite all these difficulties, the situation would not be so bleak if the planet's precious water were used more carefully. Inefficient irrigation methods often squander 60 percent of the water before it reaches the crops. Increased efficiencyusing available technologycould reduce industrial water consumption by half. And even urban water use could be cut by 30 percent if broken pipes were fixed quickly.
Measures to conserve water require both the will and the way. Are there sound reasons to believe that our planet's precious water will be conserved for future generations? Our final article will address this question.
* See the article "CherrapunjiOne of the Wettest Places on Earth," in Awake! of May 8, 2001.
Appeared in Awake! June 22, 2001 |
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