A city of 20 million without water. Welcome to the future. Is LA next?
Comment
from David Korn -
"Talk
about a real tipping point! 'A water truck as a “parade float”,
carefully escorted by heavily armed military police officers. "That's
what will happen with the deepening crisis. Police will “guard”
the water for those who can pay for it, while we die of thirst' and '
selfies were taken in front of the mansions by protesters, it was
their souvenir. "Looks at how these people live!"
A
Sea of People Fighting for Water in Sao Paulo
7
March, 2015
These
sacred luxury consumer temples (where the water tanks are always
full), lowered their doors before the the march that brought together
15 thousand men, women and children - a significant part dressing in
MTST (Workers Homeless Movement)’s t-shirts - in addition to
other left wing organizations protesting on Thursday (26/02) against
the water crisis in São Paulo.
Aerial
views captured by a drone, from the march meeting point at Largo da
Batata to the arrival at Bandeirantes Palace, in Morumbi
neighborhood. (Photos: Mídia NINJA/ContaD'agua.org)
For
the rest of the article GO
HERE.
Water
Levels Still Dropping
Near São Paulo
Satellite imagery shows reservoirs still perilously low in the midst of Brazil’s rainy season.
Satellite imagery shows reservoirs still perilously low in the midst of Brazil’s rainy season.
Why
fresh water shortages
will cause the next great
global crisis
Last
week drought in São Paulo was so bad, residents tried drilling
through basement floors for groundwater. As reservoirs dry up across
the world, a billion people have no access to safe drinking water.
Rationing and a battle to control supplies will follow
8
March, 2015
Water
is the driving force of all nature, Leonardo da Vinci claimed.
Unfortunately for our planet, supplies are now running dry – at an
alarming rate. The world’s population continues to soar but that
rise in numbers has not been matched by an accompanying increase in
supplies of fresh water.
The
consequences are proving to be profound. Across the globe, reports
reveal huge areas in crisis today as reservoirs and aquifers dry up.
More than a billion individuals – one in seven people on the planet
– now lack access to safe drinking water.
Last
week in the Brazilian city of São Paulo, home to 20 million people,
and once known as the City of Drizzle,drought got so bad that
residents began drilling through basement floors and car parks to try
to reach groundwater. City officials warned last week that rationing
of supplies was likely soon. Citizens might have access to water for
only two days a week, they added.
In
California, officials have revealed that the state has entered its
fourth year of drought with January this year becoming the driest
since meteorological records began. At the same time, per capita
water use has continued to rise.
In
the Middle East, swaths of countryside have been reduced to desert
because of overuse of water. Iran is one of the most severely
affected. Heavy overconsumption, coupled with poor rainfall, have
ravaged its water resources and devastated its agricultural output.
Similarly, the United Arab Emirates is now investing in desalination
plants and waste water treatment units because it lacks fresh water.
As crown prince General Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan admitted:
“For us, water is [now] more important than oil.”
Water
stress and climate change. Click here for full size image.
Illustration: Giulio Frigieri
The
global nature of the crisis is underlined in similar reports from
other regions. In south Asia, for example, there have been massive
losses of groundwater, which has been pumped up with reckless lack of
control over the past decade. About 600 million people live on the
2,000km area that extends from eastern Pakistan, across the hot dry
plains of northern India and into Bangladesh, and the land is the
most intensely irrigated in the world. Up to 75% of farmers rely on
pumped groundwater to water their crops and water use is intensifying
– at the same time that satellite images shows supplies are
shrinking alarmingly.
The
nature of the problem is revealed by US Geological Survey figures,
which show that the total amount of fresh water on Earth comes to
about 2,551,100 cubic miles. Combined into a single droplet, this
would produce a sphere with a diameter of about 170 miles. However,
99% of that sphere would be made up of groundwater, much of which is
not accessible. By contrast, the total volume from lakes and rivers,
humanity’s main source of fresh water, produces a sphere that is a
mere 35 miles in diameter. That little blue droplet sustains most of
the people on Earth – and it is under increasing assault as the
planet heats up.
Changing
precipitation and melting snow and ice are already altering
hydrological systems in many regions. Glaciers continue to shrink
worldwide, affecting villages and towns downstream. The result, says
the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change, is that the fraction
of global population experiencing water scarcity is destined to
increase throughout the 21st century. More and more, people and
nations will have to compete for resources. An international dispute
between Egypt and Ethiopia over the latter’s plans to dam the Nile
has only recently been resolved. In future, far more serious
conflicts are likely to erupt as the planet dries up.Even in high
latitudes, the one region on Earth where rainfall is likely to
intensify in coming years, climate change will still reduce water
quality and pose risks due to a number of factors: rising
temperatures; increased levels of sediments, nutrients, and
pollutants triggered by heavy rainfall; and disruption of treatment
facilities during floods. The world faces a water crisis that will
touch every part of the globe, a point that has been stressed by Jean
Chrétien, former Canadian prime minister and co-chair of the
InterAction Council. “The future political impact of water scarcity
may be devastating,” he said. “Using water the way we have in the
past simply will not sustain humanity in future.”
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