As
Texas drought spreads, firms could be up the creek –
‘If
you don’t have an active water management plan in place, you're
courting disaster’
17
July, 2013
Three
straight years of blistering drought have strained Texas' water
resources. Some cities like Midland are already steeply raising their
water prices. But it's not just residents of the Lone Star State
feeling parched. Texas-based companies are scrambling to reduce their
water usage and enact long-term water management plans as a critical
business concern.
"As
the drought continues, industry's eyes are opening," said Jordan
Furnans, senior engineer at INTERA, a Texas-based geosciences and
engineering firm. Those eyes are opening to discover that more dry
years are coming, he said.
There's
a desperate need for water to fuel industrial, chemical and energy
operations in some parts of Texas. "If plants shut down, they're
losing millions of dollars per day," Furnans said.
Such
tight water resources are forcing some Texas-based companies to adopt
aggressive water management. They're drilling deeper wells—up to
4,000 feet—to find more water. And they're reusing waste water and
even turning to systems that can use salt water.
Texas
is a lesson for companies everywhere. Most companies do not currently
have a water management plan. That has to change as water shortages
appear around the globe. Food companies--especially bottlers like
Pepsi and Coca Cola—are already revamping their water usage, but
many more water management solutions will have to be embraced in the
next few years to help companies stay ahead of the greatest global
scarcity challenge—access to fresh water.
"If
you don't have an active water management plan in place, you're
courting disaster," Furnan said.
Water
shortages are already stressing business in China, India, South
Africa and parts of South America. Yet most companies aren't moving
fast enough to stave off conflicts over the dwindling resource. Over
75 percent of the world's biggest companies see water risks as
critical, but most of these companies lack long-term water
strategies, a KPMG sustainability report concluded.
Some
of the biggest water users among corporations—food and beverage,
apparel and technology—are pioneering new ways to reduce their aqua
footprint. In addition to Coca-Cola and Pepsi, these include
companies like Nike and Anheuser-Busch. They're turning to cooling
towers, using gray water—various forms of wastewater—and
installing water meters to pinpoint high usage.
AT&T
began conserving water in 2010. After doing a water audit, the
company found that billions of gallons of water were being used,
including water used to cool facilities such as data centers. So the
company has implemented energy efficiency measures in water cooling
towers and other upgrades to reduce water usage. Overall, AT&T
has identified 125 facilities where water management changes can
significantly reduce water usage—these facilities account for
roughly half of the company's estimated 3.4 billion gallons in annual
water usage. AT&T expects to save 150 million gallons of water by
2015. "We will be making water reduction investments for years
to come," said John Schulz, director of sustainability
operations at AT&T. "It's such an emotional issue when water
is running short."
Google
has been awarded a patent for a floating data center powered by waves
and cooled by sea water.
Far
from Texas, corporations with a global footprint are scrambling to
address their water risk because shortages can quickly short-circuit
business in developing regions. Water reliability is increasing seen
as a competitive edge. In the future, businesses will need to factor
water availability—and quality—when searching for new
manufacturing sites or face possible shortages. The math is simple:
One percent of GDP growth translates into 1 percent more water
consumption, and water shortages are already dinging China's growth.
Worldwide, shortages will be dire in coming years: By 2030, there
will be a 40 percent global shortfall between water demand and water
supply, according to the World Economic Forum.
Pepsi
Bottling and Coca-Cola ran into these shortages early on. Nine years
ago, they closed down plants in India after they were believed to be
competing for limited water resource. Since then, Coca-Cola has faced
protests about depleting water in other dry areas of India.
Those
plant closures are still rare, said Giulio Boccaletti, managing
director of global fresh water at Nature Conservancy. Instead,
regulators in developing countries are putting pressure on companies
by questioning licensing agreements. "The licensing process is
slowing down," he said. Some companies that have gone into
Africa and privatized the water there have had their plants shut
down, said Eric Lowitt, managing director at Nexus Global Advisors.
The
"water wars" are forcing corporations to conduct natural
resource due diligence before expanding. Some big companies end up
playing a key role in shoring up water infrastructure in developing
countries, working with citizens and local governments, Lowitt said.
In drought-stricken countries like Chile, a company has to bring
water treatment to the area to win a license, he said.
"All
water is local in developing countries, since it's usually a
watershed or basin," said Bert Share, a senior global director
at Anheuser-Busch InBev. "So our aim is to understand a
community's water issues, such as watershed quality and quantity."
The beverage company is also partnering with private landowners to
offer them incentives for restoring water quality. "Water
management has to be collaborative, because the local issues are so
complex," Share said.
Ford,
which has operations in 70 countries, is plotting future water
scenarios, ranging from scarcity to abundance, to determine how the
company will be affected. "India and China are the two countries
most on everyone's radar," said Thomas Niemann, Ford's reporting
manager for sustainability. The car company aims to reduce its global
water use per vehicle 30 percent by 2015 through the installation of
water meters and using recycled water, among other methods.
"Companies
across the spectrum are facing water challenges. Water is becoming
the silent currency," Boccaletti said.
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