Blue Gold: The Past, The Present & The Future
PART I
Thirsty? Hold the picture in your mind of a cold glass of water on a hot summers day, before we begin! The world is a-buzz with talk of climate change the urgent need to diversify away from fossil fuels, and shrink green-house gas emissions and of course these issues are worthy of our focused attention, but another gargantuan topic of conversation seems to be far from the minds of most. Are we running out of water?
Our Most Precious ResourceAll life as we know it, from the tiniest organism to the largest mammal requires water as a basic necessity for its very existence. Each drop holds survival, distilled into its purest essence. Ours is the beautiful blue planet, with much of its surface covered in water but 97% of the worlds H2O is salt water, with only a precious 3% comprised of fresh water and we havent always acted as diligent guardians to this often overlooked asset.
We think of water as an infinite resource in the context of natural water cycles. We learn in school that water continuously repeats the process of evaporation, rainfall, rivers, ocean and back up to the skies again, but a changing climate, and human activity are dramatically altering water patterns. Increasing demand for water from growing population and industrialisation, and the globally expanding middle class make water the true Blue Gold: a resource the scarcity of which is causing an increasing amount of global conflict.
The necessity for water has always steered the course of impressively bounding human evolution, while causing its share of power struggle and disaster. From the masterful irrigation systems of the Ancient Egyptians to the revolutionary Aqueducts and sewer systems of the Romans, water has allowed human development to bloom. In this sense, the pure liquid is our gateway to health, hygiene and prosperity. The ancient Mayan empire fell when drought struck the central Americas, and conflict over the diversion of rivers is a repeated battle woven into the history of our species.
While this invaluable resource has been ever-bound to the fate of humanity, a new scale of threat is now wielding heavy blows.
It is estimated that by 2025, roughly 1.8 billion people will live in areas burdened by water scarcity, with two-thirds of the worlds population living in water-stressed regions. If current trends of water usage are continued, accompanied by population increases and upward social mobility, the world will have only 60 percent of the water it needs by 2030. Unlike the oil crisis with renewable energy sources on the rise to water there are no alternatives. No alternatives, certainly, but potential solutions to be explored. What is clear is that protecting what precious water we have, and carefully managing this life-giving resource are vital to avoiding spiralling war over water.
An Environmental ImpactStaggeringly, roughly 70% of global freshwater is already used in agriculture. The demand for water calls more and more for the draining of subterranean reserves, which precariously cannot be accurately measured. The decline of groundwater levels is exacerbated by increasingly unstable climates drought creates scarcity, while extreme rain-fall events contribute to erosion. Automotive transport pollutes cloud water, while agriculture pollutes groundwater, and industrial production leads to the contamination of both. Tragically, some 60% of the worlds wetlands are now polluted, and water borne disease trumps both war and malaria as a global killer.
Despite these challenges, optimism is still there to find. Advancements in water treatment and distribution, alongside growing awareness, had allowed many to gain access to improved drinking water sources. We will be tested, however, in water-stressed nations such as China, where 20 percent of the worlds population reside, with only 7 percent of is water.
blue gold watter sky We're so worried about making money that we don't take care of our natural resources.