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MARGARET
CATLEY-CARLSON: BIO
Chair, Global Water Partnership, Stockholm,
Sweden
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Chair
of the Global Water Partnership, the Board of the Crop Diversity Trust,
and the International Advisory Committee for Group Suez Lyonnaise des Eaux.
Ms. Catley-Carlson is a member of the UN Secretary General’s Advisory
Board, the Rosenberg Forum, and of the Council of Advisors of the
World Food Prize.
She
serves on the Boards of the Biblioteca Alexandrina, IMWI (the
International
Center
for Water Resource Management);the IFDC (Fertilizer Management) and
IIED - the International Institute for Environment and Development.
She has
been chair of the ICARDA and CABI Boards and the Water Supply and
Sanitation Collaborative Council, Vice Chair of the IDRC Board and a
commissioner of Water for the 21st Century.
She was President of
the Canadian International Development Agency 1983-89; Deputy Executive
Director of UNICEF in New York 1981-1983; President of the Population
Council in New York 1993-98; and Deputy Minister of the Department of
Health and Welfare of Canada 1989-92. Ms. Catley-Carlson is an Officer of
the Order of
Canada.
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Board Chair,
International
Center
on Agriculture in Dry Areas (ICARDA)
Aleppo,
Syria
UNITED NATIONS - / www.MaximsNews.com@
U.N./
- 01 September 2007: Mrs.
Catley-Carlson delivered this speech as she prepares to step down as Chair of
the Global Water Partnership:
PAGE
ONE PAGE
TWO
PAGE TWO
Promises
Desalinization
Desalinization
becomes a more and more interesting option for some, given that sea water
comprises 97% of the earth’s water. Some
12,500 desalinization plants now dot the planet, with 2/3 of these in the Middle
East, and fully one quarter in Saudi Arabia. New plants are being built
in Florida,
California, and the Caribbean. Only 1% of water use is accounted for by desalinated water, but the number
is growing (GWI, 2004).
Membranes
Membranes offer promises
for water remediation. Why not
re-circulate all of the gray water in an apartment building – indeed if the
membrane is good enough – why not re-circulate all of the water?
Why not build whole neighborhoods on this principle – why have huge
water mains and sewer mains if the processing can be done locally by membrane?
Demand
Management
Anywhere there
is metering, demand drops. In
California – Pacific Institute “Waste Not, Want Not" estimates that up
to one-third of California's current urban water use -- more than 2.3 million
acre-feet -- can be saved using existing technology. And at least 85% of this
savings (over 2 million acre-feet) can be saved at costs below what it will cost
to tap into new sources of supply and without the social, environmental, and
economic impacts that any major water project will bring (Gleik et al., 2003).
Composting toilets reduce the demand for water, as do innovative pit latrines
for communities of modest means as has been shown by Sulabh Institute (www.sulabhenvis.nic.in/About%20Sulabh.html)
in
India
. Separating feces and urine allows these to be treated as resources.
More water
The
time honored solution to water problems has been to increase supply, i.e. build
dams, extend the pipelines, and pump more out of the aquifer. China
is busy moving part of the Yangtze River to the North, and India is talking very seriously about joining its rivers in a national grid.
The Red-Dead Sea Connector talks go on throughout the
Middle East
atrocities.
So
the supply side process continues, with its serious consequences for rivers,
aquifers, and displaced populations. Many
unnecessary dams have been built, with benefits to be sure but a great deal of
ancillary damage for the simple reason that it is a lot more politically
rewarding (and in many countries a major source of corruption income)
for Governments to supply more water than to attempt to reduce the demand
of their populations.
As
of two years ago, there were 47,655 large dams in the world and about 800,000
small dams (WCD 2002). Interesting, they are almost all in the medium to rich
countries. Anti dam protesters in
the industrialized world, through their pressure on industrialized state
governments and international financial intuitions, have ensured that
international financing institution (IFIs) no longer fund dams.
As a result even needed water storage capacity has not increased in the
poorest countries as shown in the reports presented during the World Bank Water
Week 2004 (waterweek_2004@worldbank.org).
Middle class countries such as
Turkey,
Iran, China
and many others have gone on building dams using other resources. The
poorest cannot finance with their own resources, and therefore do not have the
storage they need. No countries with
variable rainfall have become prosperous without being able to store water.
There is almost no storage capacity in the poorest countries, almost all of
which have highly variable rainfall patterns. Unless
this changes, they will stay poor.
Nanotechnology
If
engineered microbes can eat oil in oil spills, and might be designed to
transform arsenic to less harmful compounds, why not engineer them through
nanotechnology to take on the heavy metals in our waste water (and then use
bulrushes to purify the organic wastes, a delightful mixture of high tech and
low tech!)
Better Science for Water for Food
For the first time in world history, water demand for
nonagricultural uses is growing more rapidly in absolute terms than water demand
for agriculture (Rosegrant et al., 2002).
The task is to ‘reinvent irrigation for the 21st
century’. There is, for example, a
wide technology gap between required
irrigation practices for wheat, barley, corn, cotton, sugar beet, potatoes and
tomatoes and actual water application in
most areas. Improved water use
efficiency means high potential water savings.
The ‘free ride’ we have had while we have depleted groundwater
resources is coming to its inevitable end.
The objective must be that each cubic
meter of water should be applied at right time – efficiency comes by applying
even small amount of water to alleviate severe moisture stress during most
sensitive stages of crop growth and seed filling – applying before stress
reduces plants yield potential.
New technology can and will help in this
process. There are many new and
exciting techniques we can use to help us make water go further
·
Watershed modeling,
·
Integrating simulation techniques with GIS projections
·
Maps graphs for natural resource impact
·
Daily temperature data, soil and land management data collected
from meteorological data,
·
Satellite imagery,
·
Surface flow processes, erosion, nutrient transport, grazing
effects, yields.
The evidence that these techniques can
work is provided in compelling figures. ICARDA’s
special expertise in the area most likely to be most affected by climate change
suggests that:
·
A 50% decrease in irrigation water use in wheat irrigation in the
ICARDA area gives only 10 – 20% loss in cereal production
·
Winter sowing of cereals reduces water needs
- lentil and chickpea yields are doubled if they are planted earlier to
catch the Mediterranean rain
·
Water harvesting yields small and big miracles around the world
·
New drought-tolerant cultivars offer huge potential for improved
yield in dry conditions
·
Improved forage crops – it is estimated that if
70% of the 30 m hectares of land left fallow in West Asia and North
Africa every year could be sown to
forage legumes, this would produce enough feed for 80 million sheep, and could
result in 1.4 m tones of nitrogen
fixed in the soil (ICARDA, 2005).
Saltwater
and wastewater agriculture
We
can also find “new” water for food if we redirect research priorities and
put in place effective regulatory frameworks.
·
Water harvesting
·
Brackish water
·
Treated effluent – the issue here is how much treatment?
This has to be one of the most exciting potential areas for “finding”
water; the hazard is that industrial and biological wastes are often mixed,
resulting in toxins and heavy metals in the admixture.
Rainwater
harvesting
The old
techniques are being rediscovered and reapplied to yield more water for topical
use. Eaves-troughs are
collecting water from schools and public buildings to provide water for
community use. Families are
collecting rainwater – all over
India, but also in
Germany. Tanks are being rebuilt and
watersheds refurbished in the process; rivulets are flowing in formerly denuded
landscapes (GRWHC, 2005). Communities are putting water back into the subsoil
and aquifer by conscious channeling of rainwater.
Global satellites may help us to do this on a global basis.
Reallocation
Some of the real
answers will have to come through allocation decisions.
Pragmatic but sometimes difficult steps can lead to dramatic consequences
·
Jordan
– a 5% transfer from agricultural use would increase domestic supplies by 15%
·
Morocco
– where 92% of water is used for agriculture, a 5% diversion would
effectively double the supplies in domestic sector
·
The
San Diego
and Imperial Valley
accord sees the municipality pay for water that allows investment in improved
irrigation facilities. The water
used in
Imperial Valley
agricultural use would provide for domestic use for 12 million people.
·
Costa de Hermosilla in Mexico – proposals to improve agricultural use pattern could avoid need for
desalination plant (100 km from coastline).
Can the world
manage better?
Water
cannot be created; it can only be managed. And
water is local, quintessentially so, unlike energy or food commodities which
travel through trade. If by common
consent, there is enough water – just enough
in many areas, but probably enough, can’t we just improve management? A brief glimpse at traditional water management precepts will signal some
of the issues. How do we
manage water now, or, how did we get into these difficulties?
·
There is usually no
Ministry of Water, and there is no single UN water organization to set global
standards for water management. There
are sectoral standards, of course.
·
Governments see their
principal role as delivering water to their citizens
·
Far too many people insist
that “Water should be no cost/low cost”. Many who advocate that water is a
Human Right insist that it must be free.
The relevant UN resolution says it should be ‘affordable’ (ECOSOC,
2002). While subsidy is
essential to protect the poor, paying enough to keep the pipes and reservoirs of
the system going is essential in countries with no tax base, few government
revenues and other priorities for aid Euros.
·
Water governance/expertise
is organized sectorally.
·
Jurisdiction: rivers,
lakes, groundwater do not respect national boundaries.
Things
are changing and there are new ways of looking at water governance.
More rather than less governance is needed for this ultimate public good.
The following water management functions must therefore stay in public
hands:
·
Allocating water
·
Deciding on protecting the
environmental share
·
Establishing water law
·
Setting regulatory
framework
·
Managing inspection
functions
·
Ensuring data collection,
retention and distribution
·
Managing public debate on
issues
·
Managing communication on
water issues
·
Getting some of the
corruption out of the water sector (Transparency International, 2004)
·
Ensuring subsidy for
poorest population
Agriculture is
the biggest water using activity and is responsible for 70 to 80 % of a
country’s water consumption. It warrants careful attention. Billions are spent
in subsidies to farmers throughout the world but they are allocated without any
consideration to water problems, thus creating artificially a water crisis,
which will manifest itself as a food security crisis
The water
problem is as much a financial problem as a water problem. There is no solution
to the water problem without some overhaul of the way agriculture is subsidized,
water as an industrial or agricultural input is priced, local authorities are
vested with the responsibility to provide water to their inhabitants and good
managers and sustainable financial resources are allocated to them.
It
is not simple. Moving to a
conscious, transparent, publicly announced allocation of available water is a
fraught process almost guaranteed to generate more enemies than friends for the
party doing the allocating. The
move toward charging for water services offers opposition parties an instant
election issue. Managing across
boundaries and agreeing to share the benefits of water, often between neighbors
with centuries old traditions of mistrust is not easy.
Current arrangements favor the powerful; who will speak for the weak?
Who speaks for the environment? Irrigated-land
agriculturalists in many countries have much more power than either the rural or
urban poor. There are taboos
against waste water re-use.
All of this
changes every day. Every day, the
population grows and the amount of water available per person decreases.
Every week, somewhere in the world there are manifestations of climate
variability which will have marked impact on water resources.
Every month, pollution increases. Meetings
are held to assess how best to intervene. We
must rethink our use of water – there is no other option.
The path ahead is full of challenge, nowhere more than in the dryland
areas.
References
ECOSOC.
2002. Economic and Social Council of United Nations. Document E/C12/2002/11, 26
November 2002.
Gleik,
P.H., D. Haasz, C.Henges-Jack, V. Srinivasan, G. Wolff, K. Kao Cushing, and A.
Mann. 2003. Waste Not, Want Not: The Potential for Urban Water Conservation in California. Pacific Institute,
654 13th Street,
Oakland,
CA
94612.
Global
Rainwater Harvesting Collective (GRWHC). 2005. Newsletter No.5. The Barefoot
College, SWRC, Tilonia, Madanganj, District
Ajmer, Rajasthan,
India.
(www.globalrainwaterharvesting.org/).
Global
Water Intelligence (GWI). 2004. Desalination Markets 2005-2015: A Global
Assessment and Forecast. (http://www.globalwaterintel.com/).
Global
Water Partnership. 2000. Integrated Water Resource Management. TAC Background
Paper No. 4, 67 p. (www.gwpforum.org/gwp/library/Tacno4.pdf).
International
Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA). 2005. Annual Report 2004.
ICARDA, Aleppo,
Syria.
Johannesburg
Earth
Summit. 2002. UN Johannesburg Conference on Sustainable development. (www.johannesburgsummit.org/index.html).
Schuyt,
Kirsten and Luke Brander. 2004. Living
Waters, Conserving the Source of Life: The
Economic Values of the World’s Wetlands, World Wide Fund for Nature, Gland/
Amsterdam. 32p.
Seckler,
D., U. Amarsinghe, D. Molden, R. de Silva, and R. Barker.1997. World Water
Demand and Supply 1990 to 2025: Scenarios and Issues. Research Report 19.
International Water Management Institute, Colombo, Sri Lanka.
Shiklomanov,
I.
1997. Assessment of water resources and water availability in the World.
Stockholm Environment Institute.
Transparency
International. 2004. Global Corruption Report 2004. Transparency International,
Alt Moabit 96, 10559, Berlin,
Germany. (http://www.transparency.org/).
United Nations
Millennium Project. 2005. Health, Dignity and Development: What would it take?
UN Millennium Task Force on Water and Sanitation. (http://www.unmillenniumproject.org/documents/
).
Wolf, Aaron.
(ed.) 2002. Conflict Prevention and Resolution in Water Systems. Cheltenham,
UK: Elgar.
Wolf, Aaron T.,
Kersti Stahl, and Marcia F. Macomber. 2003. Conflict and cooperation within
international river basins: The importance of institutional capacity. Water
Resources Update. Volume 125. Universities Council on Water Resources.
World Commission
on Dams (WCD). 2002. Dams and Development: A new framework for decision making.
Earthscan, London. 448p.
US National
Intelligence Council. 2000. Global Trends 2015: A dialogue about the future with
nongovernmental experts.
( www.odci.gov/cia/publications/global-trends 2015/index.html ).
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