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Great Lakes
Article:
Advocates
Warn of Thirst and Turmoil for a Parched Planet
World Running Short on
Water
by Ginger Adams
Otis
Village Voice
August 21 - 27, 2002
In
1995 World Bank vice president Ismail Serageldin made
a much quoted prediction for the new millennium: "If the
wars of this century were fought over oil, the wars of
the next century will be fought over water." Serageldin
has been proven correct much faster than he or anyone
else thought. Two years into the 21st century, the global
water wars are upon us.
The
very bleak details about water security may finally seep
out during the 10-day United Nations World Summit on Sustainable
Development (WSSD) starting Monday in Johannesburg, South
Africa. While heads of state and corporate bigwigs converge
in Sandton (rumored to be Africa's wealthiest suburb),
thousands of anti-globalization activists and environmentalists
will be attending shadow summits just down the street.
They'll be trying to call attention to the dangers of
privatizing the world's water supplies, and pointing to
places like Nelspruit, 125 miles to the north, where residents
now buy their drinking water from the Biwater corporation,
and are all but dying of dehydration. The problem isn't
water flow but cash flow: Poor residents can't pay privatized
rates. It's a scenario that's beginning to play out all
over South Africa. "That's exactly what's wrong with privatization,"
says Maude Barlow, chair of the Council of Canadians,
Canada's largest public advocacy group. "These companies
completely reject the idea that water is a common property
belonging to all living creatures. Their only goal is
to commodify the earth's most precious resource."
The
concept of privatizing water service has been around since
Napoléon III, but only 5 percent of the world population
currently receives water from corporations. Activists
want to stop the process before it goes any further; the
world's water lords want rapid expansion. In 1998, when
the private sector began angling for the water market
in earnest, the World Bank predicted the global trade
in water would soon generate revenues of up to $800 billion
a year. Two years later, at a World Water Forum in the
Hague, a triumvirate of multinational water companies
backed by the World Trade Organization (WTO) successfully
strong-armed the UN into defining water as a human need
(which can be sold for profit by private companies) instead
of a human right (which means people are ensured equal
access on a nonprofit basis).
Faster
than you can say Evian, revenue projections jacked into
the multiple trillions. Private companies had a green
light to approach cities and states around the globe (usually
cash-strapped ones) and offer to lease, buy, or enter
into a consortium agreement for the existing municipal
water systems. After privatization is complete, the companies
make a profit by charging residents every time they turn
on a tap or flush a toilet. Some also offer wastewater
services, such as sewage disposal, and implement water
treatment plants. Many of these companies get profit guarantees
written into their contracts. For example, if residents
use less water than predicted, companies can raise rates
so profits don't fall below a predetermined number. Once
in control of a water system, they can also take any surplus
and sell it off to the highest bidder, usually a neighboring
city that's experiencing an unexpected shortfall. In some
parts of the world, reports the trade journal Global Water
Intelligence, water commands the same price as oil. No
wonder Fortune magazine touted the water market
as a "safe harbor in stocks—a place that promises steady
consistent returns well into the next century."
The
two reigning conglomerates are Vivendi Universal and Suez,
both based in France, which have amassed 70 percent of
the existing world water market. Together they deliver
water services to more than a hundred million people.
Suez operates in 130 countries and Vivendi in more than
90. Right behind them are Bouygues-SAUR (French), RWE-Thames
(German), and Bechtel-United Utilities (American). These
are the biggest multinationals, but there are numerous
other companies doing the same thing on a smaller scale.
But
what of the world's water crisis? Currently the UN identifies
approximately six "hot stains," places where water is
so scarce that human life may not be sustainable and conflict
over dwindling resources is an ever present threat. Water
giants like Vivendi insist privatization and conservation
aren't mutually exclusive. They say it can actually improve
water service, because for-profit companies are wealthy
enough to invest in new technology and infrastructure
improvements to aging systems where poor governments are
not. Activists like Barlow say for-profit companies are
not set up as sustainable enterprises or to conserve resources.
The more water sold, the better their bottom line—so why
should they try to halt the world's parching?
Here's
the really hard news Barlow says the water lords don't
want known: Not only is there the same amount of water
on the planet as there was at its creation, it is almost
all the same water. There is no secret source to replace
the vast quantities that modern humankind consumes, and
technology hasn't come up with a magic bullet either.
Desalination of seawater has proven outrageously expensive
and leaves behind brackish water mostly uninhabitable
for marine life. According to the latest official calculations,
there are only 8.6 million cubic miles of fresh water
left on earth, a mere 2.6 percent of the 330 million cubic
feet of total water. The UN predicts that two-thirds of
the world's population will live in water-scarce regions
by 2025, and many of them in regions previously considered
water-rich, like the United States.
Environmentalists—and
even some heads of state—are frantically trying to undo
the damage. Much of the problem can be traced to river
damming and the Green Revolution, both of which were embraced
by the American government during the last century and
exported globally. The Green Revolution was supposed to
solve the world's hunger problem by introducing high-yield
miracle seeds to developing nations, especially India
and China. Instead it created an ongoing irrigation crisis
by replacing drought-resistant indigenous crops with water-guzzling
varieties. Farmers were forced to forgo traditional and
sustainable irrigation methods; deep wells became the
norm, pulling precious groundwater out of already water-scarce
areas. Then developers began trying to solve the irrigation
problem by building big dams. According to Sandra Postel
of the Global Water Policy Project, a water conservation
advocacy group, there were 5000 large dams (more than
15 meters high) worldwide in 1950. There are now 45,000.
On average, there have been two large dams constructed
every day for the past 50 years. "They were built with
the best of intentions," says Postel, "to supply hydroelectric
power, irrigation, and public water, and to control floods.
But we didn't understand the full range of ecological
consequences that would unfold."
Now
four of the world's greatest rivers (the Ganges, Yellow
River, Nile, and Colorado) routinely dry up before reaching
the ocean, and water that normally would roll through
the earth and feed aquifers runs off pavements and rooftops
into sewers, eventually ending up (usually carrying pesticides
and toxins) in the ocean, but without moisturizing forests
and marshlands on the way. Add relentless human consumption,
industrial farming, and global warming and you've got
the Ogallala Aquifer, which stretches from the Texas Panhandle
to South Dakota and is believed to have once contained
4 trillion tons of pristine water. It's now mined continuously
by over 200,000 groundwater wells. They pull out 13 million
gallons per minute—which is 14 times faster than nature's
replenishing rate. Each year since 1991 the aquifer's
water table has dropped three feet—a huge amount when
multiplied by the area. By some estimates, more than half
its water is gone. And that's not America's only problem
area: one of the heaviest water-using places on the planet—California—is
in serious trouble. The state's Department of Water Resources
says that if more supplies aren't found by 2020, residents
will face a shortfall of fresh water nearly as great as
the amount that all of its towns and cities together are
consuming today. And the U.S. is still considered water-rich;
countries with less abundance are in even more danger.
That's
one note activists will stress at next week's meeting:
danger. Since they've had no luck convincing governments
to stop making quick profits off "the commons"—essential
resources that historically belong to one and all—they're
going to invoke public security. "Water scarcity is now
a serious source of conflict in many places," says Barlow.
"Almost every country in the Middle East is facing a water
crisis of historic proportions." Israel has aggressively
mined water wherever possible throughout the region, severely
taxing water systems in Syria and Jordan (not to mention
Palestinian townships). And Turkey has caused serious
tension with plans to dam the Euphrates River, thereby
diverting much of its life-sustaining flow to Syria and
Iraq.
Bangladesh,
which depends heavily on rivers that originate in India,
is suffering terribly now because India has diverted and
dammed so many of its water sources. In Africa, relations
between Botswana and Namibia are severely strained by
Namibian plans to construct a pipeline to divert water
from the shared Okavango River. Ethiopia plans to take
more water from the Nile, although Egypt is heavily dependent
on those waters for irrigation and power. And as water
tables fall steadily in the North China Plain (which yields
more than half of China's wheat and nearly a third of
its corn) as well as in northwest India's Punjab region,
experts are bracing for a highly combustible imbalance
between available water supplies and human needs.
Officials
attending the upcoming WSSD meeting are certainly aware
of these problems. They just can't figure out which way
to approach a solution. Most of the northern governments
(essentially the U.S., Canada, and the European Union)
want the UN to start adopting trade agreements similar
to those put forth by the WTO. They're pressuring the
UN to solve the world's resource crisis by implementing
"voluntary partnerships" with private companies to take
over government-run industries devoted to public health,
clean air, and water. Representatives from the companies
will be on hand to reassure officials that they can privatize
and conserve at the same time.
Delegates
from poorer nations, with the possible exception of South
Africa, aren't buying that idea. They got a taste of WTO
justice when northern trade partners wanted to export
genetically modified seeds. Several developing countries
declined to buy because they don't want modified food
in their environments, and they landed in WTO court for
trade violations. But under previously signed UN accords,
nations do have the right to refuse products they feel
are environmentally unsound. One of the questions poorer
nations want answered at the WSSD is which entity has
ultimate power when agreements conflict. They hope it's
the UN—otherwise they can all too easily envision their
natural resources being siphoned off to nurture the golf
courses and swimming pools of the world's elite.
Realistically
and unfortunately, says Barlow, the shadow summits planned
for next week probably won't have much of an impact on
the final WSSD outcome. The bigger goal, she says, is
to flame public outrage and derail the privatization trend
at the World Water Forum scheduled for next March in Japan.
But
Barlow and crew had better hurry: The water crisis is
growing so fast that even developed nations are swigging
from each other. Canada's abundant fresh water supply
has already whetted the appetite of George Bush. There's
been talk from his administration about using the existing
oil-pipeline infrastructure in the Northern Provinces
to flow Canadian water to the American Midwest, which,
under existing the North American Free Trade Agreement,
is perfectly legitimate. And once Canada opens the taps,
it can't turn them off again without violating NAFTA accords.
"Isn't it great," says Barlow, "that while much of the
developing world is grappling with extreme water deprivation,
the U.S. is making contingency plans to keep desert mirages
like Las Vegas up and running?"
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