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What is the Global Water Challenge?. Laura Keating Global Strategy Institute Center for Strategic and International Studies March 23, 2007. Parameters. Challenges. Solutions. The Global Water Challenge: PARAMETERS. Per Capita Water Availability. SCARCITY. SCARCITY. 90%. 80%.
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What is the Global Water Challenge? • Laura Keating • Global Strategy Institute • Center for Strategic and International Studies • March 23, 2007
Parameters Challenges Solutions
Per Capita Water Availability SCARCITY
90% 80% SCARCITY
1.1 BILLION 2.6 BILLION ACCESS
United Nations Development Program: “Not having access to clean water” is a euphemism for profound deprivation. ACCESS
Developed Regions (15) Populations without access to improved drinking water sources in 2002 (millions of people) Source: Millennium Assessment Program Eurasia (20) Oceania (3) Latin America & Caribbean (60) East Asia (303) Africa (295) South Asia (234) Western Asia (23) ACCESS Southeast Asia (115)
QUALITY Chinese SEPA: more than 70% of water in five out of seven major water systems is too polluted for human use
ECOSYSTEMS Millennium Ecosystem Assessment: 5%-25% current use is unsustainable
QUALITY ECOSYSTEMS ACCESS SCARCITY
Human Development Challenge Economic Challenge Security Challenge
Human Development • Gathering Water • 10-60 minutes per day • Uganda: 660 hours/family • Africa: 40 billion working hours
Human Development • Water-related Disease • 50% of developing world’s hospital beds • 1.8 million diarrheal deaths • 17% of all child mortality
Human Development 10-year-old girl in El Alto, Bolivia: “Of course I wish I were in school. I want to learn to read and to write... but how can I? My mother needs me to get water and the standpipe here is only open from 10-12. You have to get in line early because so many people come here.” Text
$29 billion $34 billion Latin America South Asia sub-Saharan Africa East Asia $23.5 billion $66 billion Economic Challenge $170 billion = 2.6%
“Whiskey is for drinking, water is for fighting over” Security Challenge
Security Challenge Water’s Importance Water Trends Water Conflict + =
Conflict or Collaboration? Global number & type of events related to international river basins, 1948-1998 Collaboration Conflict Extensive military act Political/military hostile action Strong official verbal hostility Neutral non-significant act Official verbal support Economic/Technical agreement or support Intl. water treaty Small-scale military act Diplomatic/economic hostile action Mild official verbal hostility Mild verbal support Cultural/ scientific agreement or support Military econ. strategic support
1 Mobilize technologies
2 Integrated Water Resource Management
3 Rational pricing
4 Multilateral cooperation
www.csis.org www.csis.org/gsi/global_waters_future/
What is the Global Water Challenge? • Laura Keating • Global Strategy Institute • Center for Strategic and International Studies • March 23, 2007