The following is an excerpt of Chapter 5 in Maude Barlow's latest book, Blue Covenant.
The Future of Water
The three water crises - dwindling freshwater supplies, inequitable access to water and the corporate control of water - pose the greatest threat of our time to the planet and to our survival. Together with impending climate change from fossil fuel emissions, the water crises impose some life-or-death decisions on us all. Unless we collectively change our behavior, we are heading toward a world of deepening conflict and potential wars over the dwindling supplies of freshwater - between nations, between rich and poor, between the public and the private interest, between rural and urban populations, and between the competing needs of the natural world and industrialized humans.
Water Is Becoming a Growing Source of Conflict Between Countries
Around the world, more that 215 major rivers and 300 groundwater basins and aquifers are shared by two or more countries, creating tensions over ownership and use of the precious waters they contain. Growing shortages and unequal distribution of water are causing disagreements, sometimes violent, and becoming a security risk in many regions. Britain's former defense secretary, John Reid, warns of coming "water wars." In a public statement on the eve of a 2006 summit on climate change, Reid predicted that violence and political conflict would become more likely as watersheds turn to deserts, glaciers melt and water supplies are poisoned. He went so far as to say that the global water crisis was becoming a global security issue and that Britain's armed forces should be prepared to tackle conflicts, including warfare, over dwindling water sources. "Such changes make the emergence of violent conflict more, rather than less, likely," former British prime minister Tony Blair told The Independent. "The blunt truth is that the lack of water and agricultural land is a significant contributory factor to the tragic conflict we see unfolding in Darfur. We should see this as a warning sign."
The Independent gave several other examples of regions of potential conflict. These include Israel, Jordan and Palestine, who all rely on the Jordan River, which is controlled by Israel; Turkey and Syria, where Turkish plans to build dams on the Euphrates River brought the country to the brink of war with Syria in 1998, and where Syria now accuses Turkey of deliberately meddling with its water supply; China and India, where the Brahmaputra River has caused tension between the two countries in the past, and where China's proposal to divert the river is re-igniting the divisions; Angola, Botswana and Namibia, where disputes over the Okavango water basin that have flared in the past are now threatening to re-ignite as Namibia is proposing to build a threehundred- kilometer pipeline that will drain the delta; Ethiopia and Egypt, where population growth is threatening conflict along the Nile; and Bangladesh and India, where flooding in the Ganges caused by melting glaciers in the Himalayas is wreaking havoc in Bangladesh, leading to a rise in illegal, and unpopular, migration to India.
While not likely to lead to armed conflict, stresses are growing along the U.S.-Canadian border over shared boundary waters. In particular, concerns are growing over the future of the Great Lakes, whose waters are becoming increasingly polluted and whose water tables are being steadily drawn down by the huge buildup of population and industry around the basin. A joint commission set up to oversee these waters was recently bypassed by the governors of the American states bordering the Great Lakes, who passed an amendment to the treaty governing the lakes that allows for water diversions to new communities off the basin on the American side. Canadian protests fell on deaf ears in Washington. In 2006, the U.S. government announced plans to have the U.S. coast guard patrol the Great Lakes using machine guns mounted on their vessels and revealed that it had created thirty-four permanent live-fire training zones along the Great Lakes from where it had already conducted a number of automatic weapons drills due to fierce opposition, firing three thousand lead bullets each time into the lakes. The Bush administration has temporarily called off these drills but is clearly asserting U.S. authority over what has in the past been considered joint waters.
Similar trouble is brewing on the U.S.-Mexican border, where a private group of U.S.-based water rights holders is using the North American Free Trade Agreement to challenge the long-term practice by Mexican farmers to divert water from the Rio Grande before it reaches the United States.
Water Is Becoming a Global Security Issue: The United States
Water has recently (and suddenly) become a key strategic security and foreign policy priority for the United States. In the wake of the terrorist attacks of 9-11, protection of U.S. waterways and drinking water supplies from terrorist attack became vitally important to the White House. When Congress created the Department of Homeland Security in 2002, it gave the department responsibility for securing the nation's water infrastructure and allocated us$548 million in appropriations for security of water infrastructure facilities, funding that was increased in subsequent years. The Environmental Protection Agency created a National Homeland Security Research Center to develop the scientific foundations and tools to be used in the event of an attack on the nation's water systems, and a Water Security Division was established to train water utility personnel on security issues. It also created a Water Information Sharing and Analysis Center for dissemination of alerts about potential threats to drinking water and, with the American Water Works Association, a rapid e-mail notification system for professionals called the Water Security Channel. Ever true to market economy ideology, the Department of Homeland Security's mandate includes promoting publicprivate partnerships in protecting the nation's water security.
But the interest in water did not stop there. Water is becoming as important a strategic issue as energy in Washington. In an August 2004 briefing note for the Institute for the Analysis of Global Security, a think tank that focuses on the link between energy and security, Dr. Allan R. Hoffman, a senior analyst for the U.S. Department of Energy, declared that the energy security of the United States actually depends on the state of its water resources and warns of a growing water-security crisis worldwide. "Just as energy security became a national priority in the period following the Arab Oil Embargo of 1973-74, water security is destined to become a national and global priority in the decades ahead," says Hoffman. He notes that central to addressing water security issues is finding the energy to extract water from underground aquifers, transport water through pipelines and canals, manage and treat water for reuse and desalinate brackish and sea water - all technologies now being promoted by U.S. government partnerships with American companies. He also points out that the U.S. energy interests in the Middle East could be threatened by water conflicts in the region: "Water conflicts add to the instability of a region on which the U.S. depends heavily for oil.
Continuation or inflammation of these conflicts could subject U.S. energy supplies to blackmail again, as occurred in the 1970s." Water shortages and global warning pose a "serious threat" to America's national security, top retired military leaders told the president in an April 2007 report published by the national security think tank cna Corporation. Six retired admirals and five retired generals warned of a future of rampant water wars into which the United States will be dragged. Erik Peterson, director of the Global Strategy Institute of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a research organization in Washington that calls itself a "strategic planning partner for the government," says that the United States must make water a top priority in foreign policy. "There is a very, very critical dimension to all these global water problems here at home," he told Voice of America News. "The first is that it's in our national interest to see stability and security and economic development in key areas of the world, and water is a big factor with that whole set of challenges." His center has joined forces with itt Industries, the giant water technology company; Proctor & Gamble, which has created a home water purifier called pur and is working with the un in a joint publicprivate venture in developing countries; Coca-Cola; and Sandia National Laboratories to launch a joint-research institute called Global Water Futures (gwf). Sandia, whose motto is "securing a peaceful and free world through technology" and that works to "maintain U.S. military and nuclear superiority," is contracted out to weapons manufacturer Lockheed Martin by the U.S. government, to operate, thus linking water security to military security in a direct way.
The mandate of Global Water Futures is twofold: to affect U.S. strategy and policy regarding the global water crisis and to develop the technology necessary to advance the solution. In a September 2005 report, Global Water Futures warned that the global water crisis is driving the world toward "a tipping point in human history," and elaborated on the need for the United States to start taking water security more seriously: "In light of the global trends in water, it is clear that water quality and water management will affect almost every major U.S. strategic priority in every key region of the world. Addressing the world's water needs will go well beyond humanitarian and economic development interests. . . . Policies focused on water in regions across the planet must be regarded as a critical element in U.S. national security strategy. Such policies should be part of a broader, comprehensive, and integrated U.S. strategy toward the global water challenges."
Innovations in policy and technology must be tightly linked, says the report, no doubt music to the ears of the corporations that sponsored it. GWF calls for closer innovation and cooperation between governments and the private sector and "redoubled" efforts to mobilize public-private partnerships in the development of technological solutions. And, in language that will be familiar to critics of the Bush administration who argue that the United States is not in Iraq to promote democracy, but rather to secure oil resources and make huge profits for American companies in the "rebuilding" effort, the report links upholding American values of democracy with the profit to be gained in the process: "Water issues are critical to U.S. national security and integral to upholding American values of humanitarianism and democratic development. Moreover, engagement with international water issues guarantees business opportunity for the U.S. private sector, which is well positioned to contribute to development and reap economic reward." Listed among the U.S. government agencies engaged in water issues in the report is the Department of Commerce, which "facilitates U.S. water businesses and market research, and improves U.S. competitiveness in the international water market."
Blue Covenant: The Alternative Water Future
Humanity still has a chance to head off these scenarios of conflict and war. We could start with a global covenant on water. The Blue Covenant should have three components: a water conservation covenant from people and their governments that recognizes the right of the Earth and of other species to clean water, and pledges to protect and conserve the world's water supplies; a water justice covenant between those in the global North who have water and resources and those in the global South who do not, to work in solidarity for water justice, water for all and local control of water; and a water democracy covenant among all governments acknowledging that water is a fundamental human right for all. Therefore, governments are required not only to provide clean water to their citizens as a public service, but they must also recognize that citizens of other countries have the right to water as well and to find peaceful solutions to water disputes between states.
A good example of this is the Good Water Makes Good Neighbors project of Friends of the Earth Middle East, which seeks to use shared water and the notion of water justice to negotiate a wider peace accord in the region. Another example is the successful restoration of the beautiful Lake Constance by Germany, Austria, Lichtenstein and Switzerland, the four countries that share it.
The Blue Covenant should also form the heart of a new covenant on the right to water to be adopted both in nation-state constitutions and in international law at the United Nations. To create the conditions for this covenant will require a concerted and collective international collaboration and will have to tackle all three water crises together with the alternatives: Water Conservation, Water Justice, and Water Democracy.
Maude Barlow is the national chairperson of the Council of Canadians, chairperson of Food and Water Watch in the U.S., and co-founder of the Blue Planet Project, which is instrumental in the international community in working for the right to water for all people.
Copyright © 2008, Institute for Policy Studies
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18 Comments so far
Show AllLas Vegas and the Sacramento Valley were once deserts. Water + development changed that. The solution in the US is a "Nation Water Infrastructure (NWI)". The purpose of the NWI is to move desalinated ocean water inland and store it in existing or new acquifers/resevoirs. The technology needed to build the NWI will likely result in increasing costs for water. But the benefits greatly exceed the costs...greater control over flooding and drought, expanded green lands, removing ice melt from the oceans, reducing carbon emissions, enhancing energy security and stimulating economic activity.
And once again...Homo Stupidus only thinking of himself.
The first corporation that buys the lot next to mine with the intention of pumping the aquifer dry and selling the water in bottles is in for a surprise.
Noam Chomsky has been talking about conflicts over water rights for years.
On a strictly individual basis, rainwater harvesting is a good, effective thing to do. People have been doing it for centuries in areas where surface water isn't available. My wife and I rely on rainwater catchment for all of our water needs. We collect it off the roof of our house into cisterns. Obviously not everyone can do this, but if you have the ability, it frees you from dependence on governmental or private industry sources.
No mention of Atlanta. Last I read, that city was suppose to run out of water sometime this year. Have any of these dire predictions materialized in the U.S. yet?
Here in North Carolina we've been dealing with a drought for over a year now. Well, actually it has a lot to do with population growth and poor municipal planning, but the drought doesn't help. Funny thing, we went through the same situation in 1998 and 2002, but no measures were taken to limit growth or water usage. Authorities say that if things get worse they'll have to ration, blah, blah, blah, but then the rains come back and all is forgotten until the next time. I guess we'll have to be fighting over bottled water in the streets before they realize the errors of their ways, but of course by then it'll be too late.
old 55, you are correct about the rio conchos and that she should have positioned her words more precisely. if she can't do her job correctly, perhaps another line of work would be in order. how about diverting tributary water of...
therefore, she is still wrong about the rio grande. the river along the texas-mexico border is called the rio grande, not the rio conchos. i too live very close to the rio grande.
additionally, she should have gone deeper into the topic of water diversions of the rio grande, along with the battle between the u.s. and mexico over the very river, the rio conchos, that you mention. few people have even heard of the rio conchos, much less it's impact on the rio grande. still fewer know of this important battle currently taking place.
not only do the mexican people embrace the river more than americans, they embrace life much, much more than the spoiled, stinking, unaware americans. this being one of the primary reasons for the rio conchos battle.
ah, the border wall. our government just doesn't get it. the mexican people are some of the most resourceful, resilient peoples on this continent. a fricking wall won't stop them from coming here in search of work. and it shouldn't. until america develops a stronger work ethic, these people have as much right to be here as any immigrants now or before us do/did.
lino, the author is not mistaken. She could have stated the problem clearly, which she did not do, She's talking about the waters of the Rio Conchos, a major tributary to the Rio Grande. See: http://www.environmentaldefense.org/article.cfm?ContentID=2902
I lived on the Rio Grande for 8 years and still live within a few hours drive from it. I spent quite a bit of time on its banks and floating it one way or another and it was obvious to me that Americans for the most part have turned their back on this river, which can and should be a wonderfully rich resource for the people who live on its banks. The Mexican people embrace the river much more than the Americans do for the most part. (And just wait until the monstrosity they call the "Border Wall" goes up...unbelievable!!)
Gonna treat water like oil. Take it at the point of a nuclear gun. Destabalize entire regions to get it. Make a hell hole of the planet. Business as usual except that the entire global nation/state structure goes down like a palm leaf cabana in a taiphoon. How we gonna buy water if we're BK? They gonna loan us the money to buy water?
Yeah, maybe, in return for our nuclear disarmament, and giving up our war criminals to the International Criminal Court. That would be fun.
Heh, come on, a guy can dream can't he?
Pieces of 8.
sorry, as evidenced by the author of this article.
"...divert water from the rio grande before it reaches the united states." basic geography, basic 101, ms. barlow (even if you've never seen the rio grande, ever heard of google??), would tell you, so you could tell us, that the rio grande river originates in colorado, in the rio grande national forest, part of this area is called the weminuche wilderness area (sorry, shankari). the south fork merges with the north fork, at south fork, colorado.
on to the specifics, as if the story warrants further discussion after that failure. what about irrigated golf courses? or as wtf suggests, how about gutters and cisterns? how about businesses that turn their automated sprinklers on to their non-native landscaping, after a 2" rain? the list goes on, but it's about basic common sense, of which there is a major shortage of in this country, as evidenced by this article, and the lousy showing of responses to this life or death issue. maybe nader should have written it. no, wait, i'll take that back. let's keep he and his zealots out of this one.
"Similar trouble is brewing on the U.S.-Mexican border, where a private group of U.S.-based water rights holders is using the North American Free Trade Agreement to challenge the long-term practice by Mexican farmers to divert water from the Rio Grande before it reaches the United States."
Does the writer know that the Rio Grande starts in New Mexico? How do Mexicans divert the water when the river begins in the US?
Anyway, other than a bunch of third world countries battling over water, has anyone contemplated the idea that the US, due to poor planning is also running out of water? How about Vegas? In 2020 their water supply is gone, then what? How about the aquifer in the Mid-West that is running dry due to cattle ranching? They run out of water, then what? No one is planning anything. Our country is run by a bunch of retards who think that the poor dark people are going to run out of water or the poor dark people are going to have global warming problems. It's not just the poor dark people. It's our own homegrown idiots who are doing this to us too.
The Enron Nation Runs Aground
Just taking a cruise on the Enron nation
as It floats in misfortune on the sea of despair
buoyed up on the blue but leaking red
First class is knowing what's not been said
For we're the Enron nation
on uncharted New American Century seas
and we have a heavy load these days
like payloads called 'freedom' delivered by stealth
a short sold pay day for the empires' health
Our course is set by back room bankers boys and such
who scheme up skirmish as a starter for a better mulch
like victims for soil, for our life blood is oil
Oil that is gushing out like avarice on the shores of need,
while the Enron nation like a predator plunder tanker......
runs aground.
Water is Life. Barlow is good at connecting the corporate-military dots, but I'm surprised she didn't also focus on the looming "fossil water" crisis in the US southwest/NW Mexico, and the drying up of the Ogalalla aquifer, and the socio-political implications of these irreversible disasters for Canada, the most obvious source of more water to "sustain the unsustainable". This phrase also applies to human population, unfortunately. Species always multiply until they reach some ecological limit, and for humans, fresh water is IT. Without it you can't eat or drink, so you die.
But what bothers me is the genocidal "social engineering" that underlies much of the strategic US military-industrial mindset in relation to vital natural resources. After all, look how willing they are to merely get rid of the human "overburden" so they can mine all that Iraqi oil. Depleted uranium should do the trick over a couple more generations.
As for water, coastal desalination plants may help a lot, but only if they are solar powered and know what to do with all that salt, since global warming due to fossil fuel burning is the primary driver of global droughts, as well as through irrigation the salination of farmland.
Here is one small case study.
Cyanide heap leach gold mining was practiced in Montana from about 1979 to 1996. It has since been outlawed through citizen initiative legislation as state and federal officials refused to either enforce environmental law or properly regulate the mines.
The cyanide mines strip huge amounts of land and often become mountain removal projects. The ore is blasted and piled into enormous leach pads with cyanide solution sprayed over the ore to leach out tiny particles of gold that are then extracted from a liquid slurry.
The effects on water can be numerous including depletion of water resources used to generate the cyanide working solution, contaminating ground water with cyanide and heavy metals, and polluting surface water with acid mine drainage that becomes a witches brew of toxic heavy metals and acidic water.
And after the mining corporations declared bankruptcy, the CEO's walked away with golden parachutes. The public was stuck with mine sites that could be reclaimed.
The end result now requires water treatment in perpetuity to the tune of about $1.5 million per year. And the "treated" water is not suitable for drinking.
The cost to the public will exceed both the private profits and whatever taxes were generated during the active life of the mines in addition to the destruction of public land and the loss of multiple use of that land. And no amount of money will ever restore the beauty of the original landscape.
Once again, corporate profits are subsidized by public sacrifice.
Moral of the story is that water is more precious than gold or short-term profits !
@spartacus
Ever wonder why Pepsi and other high-fructose corn syrup drinks cost less/gallon than the cheapest bottled water in plastic jugs?
I have been advocating this for many years. In 1989 I spoke with a senior team member at Lawrence Livermore National Lab who said that major wars would be fought over water rights by 2050.
He was an optimist.
The US is as wasteful of fresh water as it is oil.
Desalinization cannot produce the quantities of water demanded by modern America.
And no-one has yet factored-in the effect of global warming to shrinking water sources.
Water tables are becoming increasingly polluted. Radio-nucleides from Los Alamos National Lab are being detected in the Santa Fe water supply, and they are 50 miles apart.
I suggest y'all start reading about rain harvesting now.
Thanks, Maude. Seems as tho we're so focused on oil we forget about what's really vital to life. I live in a (thus far) water-rich area. My neighbors to the south are facing a real crisis. Won't be long before Alabama, Florida and Georgia are going to war over water. In the end, I think Malthus had it just about right.