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Climate Change and Its Effects on Water Quality and Quantity: The Escalating Need for Conflict Management Introduction • The number of trans-national conflicts over shared water resources will increase in the near future. • This may be exacerbated by the impacts of global climate change. Global Water Shortages • 70% of the earth’s surface is covered by water. • However, 97% of the world’s water is saline. • Of the remaining 3%, 75% locked-up in glaciers and ice. • 25% may be available. • Of the 25% that is available: • 0.03% is in rivers • 0.06% is in soils • 0.3% is in lakes • 11 % is in shallow groundwater (< 2500 foot depth) • 14% is in deep groundwater (> 2500 foot depth) • • • • Population growth: Increasing per capita demand: Per capita consumption: Increasing industrial use - need for economic development • Increasing irrigated agriculture, especially in parts of world where water supplies may already be inadequate. • Reduction of Supplies • Contamination of existing supplies (especially ground water) • “Mining” of ground water (utilization of “fossil” ground water) • Climate change - present global warming models indicate likelihood of: Future shortages • By 2025, 48 countries expected to face water supply shortages: • Total population total of 2.8 billion people (35% of projected world population) will live under water short conditions. • By 2050 • 54 countries expected to face water shortages • Total population of 4 billion people (40% of projected world population) will live under water short conditions From Postel & Wolf, Dehydrating Conflict, Foreign Policy, October/November (2001). • Potential for conflict – National (continued): – Areas where conflict potential greatest • Asia (60% of world population, 36% of renewable supplies of freshwater, heavily dependent on irrigation, future municipal supplies likely to come from irrigation water supplies) • China, India, Iran and Pakistan (increasing depletion of groundwater, reduced or increasingly variable surface water flows, buildup of salts in soils, “zerosum game” in water management) • Potential for conflict – International: – Situation: Nearly 100 countries share just 13 major rivers and lakes – In Africa alone there are some 50 rivers that are shared by two or more countries – Some 261 rivers cross international boundaries – These shared watersheds contain 60% of the world’s renewable supplies of freshwater – These watersheds also contain approximately 40% of the global population From Postel & Wolf, Dehydrating Conflict, Foreign Policy, October/November (2001). The Escalating Need for Conflict Management • At both the national and the international levels, there will be increasing conflict among different water users. • Such conflicts are never resolved. • The need is for conflict management. • Four key components • Four key components (continued) 1. Reduction of demand • More efficient use of water resources (improved irrigation systems, municipal and industrial systems designed to minimize water requirements) • Population stabilization • Four key components (continued) 2. Increase of supply • Potential for desalinization (but must consider energy costs and waste disposal issues) • Climate change may make additional water supplies available in some parts of the world • Four key components (continued) 3. Recognition and control of the destabilizing impacts of unilateral actions. 4. Development of new multilateral institutions