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World needs 'greener' water policies as demand rises: UN

AFP  |  Paris 

Governments should focus on "greener" policies to improve the supply and quality of as climate change and a growing global population threaten the security of billions, the said today.

In its 2018 World Development Report, the UN calculated that an estimated 3.6 billion people -- nearly half the global population -- live in areas where can be scarce at least one month per year.

And this number could rise to 5.7 billion by 2050, the report warned.

"If we do nothing, some five billion people will be living in areas with poor access to by 2050," said UNESCO Director General, Audrey Azoulay, at the presentation of the report in

"This report proposes solutions that are based on nature to manage better. This is a major task all of us need to accomplish together responsibly so as to avoid water-related conflicts," she said.

Global use has increased by a factor of six over the past century "and continues to grow steadily at a rate of about one percent per year," the report said.

And use is expected to rise significantly due to population growth, economic development and changing consumption patterns, among other factors.

"The vast majority of the growing demand for will occur in countries with developing or emerging economies," the report said.

At the same time, the global cycle was intensifying due to climate change, "with wetter regions generally becoming wetter and drier regions becoming even drier."

- 'Ecosystem-friendly' -


So-called "grey" or man-made infrastructure -- such as reservoirs, irrigation canals and treatment plants -- were no longer sufficient to meet these challenges, said the report's editor-in-chief,

There is increasingly limited room to build more reservoirs because of silting, environmental concerns and restrictions, as well as the fact that in many developed countries the most cost-effective and viable sites had already been used, the UN argued.

"In many cases, more ecosystem-friendly forms of storage, such as natural wetlands, improvements in soil moisture and more efficient recharge of groundwater, could be more sustainable and cost-effective than traditional such as dams."

"Nature plays a unique and fundamental role in regulating the different functions of the cycle," Connor said.

"can act as regulator, cleaner and supplier".

The report said that were already showing great potential.

New York, for example, has protected the three largest watersheds that supply to the city since the late 1990s through forest preservation programmes and paying farmers to take on environmentally friendly practices.

"Disposing of the largest unfiltered supply in the US, the city now saves more than $300 million (245 million euros) yearly on sea treatment and maintenance costs," the UN said.

Another example was China's "Sponge City" project to improve availability.

By 2020, plans to build 16 pilot projects across the country with the aim of recycling 70 percent of rainwater through greater soil permeation, retention and storage, purification and the restoration of adjacent wetlands.

"These solutions are cost-effective" and not more expensive than traditional systems, said Connor.

The UN pointed to estimates that agricultural production could be increased by about 20 percent worldwide if greener management practices were used.

In addition to improving availability and quality, "it is possible to increase agricultural production per hectare with better management" and thus feed more people, said Stefan Uhlenbrook, at the UN World Assessment Forum.

"Green" infrastructure also helps fight erosion, drought and flood risks while boosting soil quality and vegetation.

And indigenous peoples could be involved in implementation, something which was not the case in "grey" infrastructure," the report said.

At the moment, however, only "marginal" use was made of such

"Accurate figures are not available", but investments in these techniques "appear to be less than one percent... of total investment in infrastructure and resource management," according to the report.

They "are often perceived as less effective" because they are less visible, Connor said.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, March 19 2018. 14:30 IST
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