0.1528
900 319 0030
x

World Water Development Report

iasparliament Logo
March 21, 2018

Why in news?

  • The United Nations World Water Development Report (WWDR) was released ahead of World Water Day (March 22).

Ensuring the sustainable use of the planet’s resources is vital for ensuring long-term peace and prosperity.

What is the report on?

  • The WWDR is an annual and thematic report that focuses on different strategic water issues each year.
  • It aims to provide decision-makers with the tools to implement sustainable use of our water resources.
  • The development of the WWDR is coordinated by the World Water Assessment Programme (WWAP).
  • The report is a joint effort of the UN agencies and entities which make up UN-Water.
  • The latest report was released at the 8th World Water Forum in Brasilia, hosted by Brazil.

What are the highlights?

  • Water - Global demand for water has increased six-fold over the past 100 years and continues to grow at the rate of 1% each year.
  • Demand for water is projected to rise faster in developing countries.
  • The report highlights that more than 5 billion people could suffer water shortages by 2050.
  • This could be due to the effects of climate change, increased demand and polluted water supplies.
  • Climate change will put an added stress on supplies because it will make wet regions wetter and dry regions drier.
  • Drought - It is arguably the greatest single threat from climate change.
  • Drought and soil degradation, the biggest risks of natural disaster, are likely to worsen.
  • Water quality - Pollution has worsened the water bodies and water is expected to deteriorate further in the coming two decades.
  • This would be mainly due to agriculture runoffs of fertiliser and other agrochemicals.
  • They load freshwater supplies with nutrients that lead to the growth of pathogens and choking algae blooms.
  • Industry and cities are also a significant problem.
  • About 80% of industrial and municipal wastewater is discharged without treatment.
  • Threat - Water scarcity can lead to civil unrest, mass migration and even to conflict within and between countries.
  • The report thus warns of conflict and civilisational threats unless actions are taken.

What is the concern with the present approach?

  • For too long, the world has turned first to human-built, or ‘grey’, infrastructure to improve water management.
  • In doing so, it has often brushed aside traditional and indigenous knowledge that embraces greener approaches.
  • But accelerated consumption, multi-faceted impacts of climate change and increasing environmental degradation is the reality now.
  • All these call for new ways of managing the competing demands on freshwater resources.

What are the suggestions?

  • Water - Reducing the stress on rivers, lakes, aquifers, wetlands and reservoirs is important.
  • Water shortage cannot be offset by groundwater supplies, a third of which are already in distress.
  • Nor is the construction of more dams and reservoirs likely to be a solution.
  • The report emphasises a shift away from watershed management.
  • It calls for a wider geographic approach that takes in land use in distant areas, particularly forests.
  • Although farmers have long seen trees as a drain on water supplies, the vegetation helps to recycle and distribute water.
  • Evidently, the São Paulo (Brazil) drought of 2014-15 has been linked to Amazon deforestation.
  • The key for change, even for the water problem, will be agriculture.
  • Agriculture - This is the biggest source of both water consumption and pollution.
  • The report thus emphasises the importance of nature-based solutions.
  • Nature-based solutions can be personal – such as dry toilets – or broad landscape-level shifts in agricultural practices.
  • In agricultural practices, it is essentially an approach to rely more on soil and trees than steel and concrete.
  • It calls for shift to “conservation agriculture”.
  • This would make greater use of rainwater rather than irrigation, and regularise crop rotation to maintain soil cover.
  • This is crucial to reverse erosion and degradation, which currently affects a third of the planet’s land.
  • The suggestions imply that the potential savings of such practices exceed the projected increase in global demand for water.
  • This would ease the dangers of conflict and provide better livelihoods for family farmers and poverty reduction.

 

Source: The Guardian

 

Quick Fact

World Water Assessment Programme

  • The WWAP focuses on assessing the developing situation of freshwater throughout the world.
  • The primary output of the WWAP is the periodic World Water Development Report.
  • UNESCO hosts the WWAP Secretariat.

World Water Forum

  • The World Water Forum is the world’s biggest water-related event and is organized by the World Water Council.
  • It is the biggest single gathering of policymakers, businesses and NGOs involved in water management.
  • Its mission is to promote awareness, build political commitment and trigger action on critical water issues.
  • It takes place every three years.

World Water Council

  • The World Water Council is an international multistakeholder platform organization.
  • Its members include organizations from the UN and intergovernmental organizations, the private sector, governments, academic institutions, civil society groups, etc.
  • Its mission is to mobilize action on critical water issues at all levels, including the highest decision-making level.
  • The Council focuses on the political dimensions of water security, adaptation and sustainability.s
Login or Register to Post Comments
There are no reviews yet. Be the first one to review.

ARCHIVES

MONTH/YEARWISE ARCHIVES

Free UPSC Interview Guidance Programme