Tuesday 10 February 2009

Majority of the world faces water shortages: UN

A small Earth globe floats in polluted water.

Two-thirds of the world’s population will face a lack of water in less than 20 years, if current trends in climate change, population growth, rural to urban migration and consumption continue, UN Deputy Secretary-General Asha-Rose Migiro has warned.
Speaking at a high-level symposium on water security at UN Headquarters in New York Migiro stressed that ‘if present trends continue, 1.8 billion people will be living in countries or regions with water scarcity by 2025, and two-thirds of the world population could be subject to water stress.’
‘The lack of safe water and sanitation is inextricably linked with poverty and malnutrition, particularly among the world’s poor,’ she said at the two-day meeting organized by the World Water Organization (WWO). ‘Today about 900 million people still rely on unimproved drinking-water supplies, and 2.5 billion people remain without improved sanitation facilities,’ she added.
The symposium is comprised of experts from the UN, Member States, as well as corporate, medical, scientific, academic and non-governmental organization (NGO) communities and it aims to identify specific threats and vulnerabilities to global water security and propose practical solutions for the protection and preservation of water supplies. Ms. Migiro noted that agriculture consumes roughly three quarters of the world’s fresh water supplies and in Africa the proportion is closer to ninety percent.
‘More than 1.4 billion people live in river basins where their use of water exceeds minimum recharge levels, leading to desiccation of rivers and the depletion of groundwater’, she said.
The Deputy Secretary-General stressed that achieving water security would mean more effective water management, including enhancing food security through more equitable allocation of water for agriculture and food production.
‘It means ensuring the integrity of ecosystems and it means promoting peaceful collaboration in the sharing of water resources, particularly in the case of boundary and transnational water resources.’

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