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US Intelligence Report: Expect Water Wars Soon
Report sees biotechnology, agricultural exports and virtual water trade as the way forward
A report released today on global water security from the Defense Intelligence Agency assesses that in next 10 years, water instability will be likely in "nations important to the United States", and says that in the next decades, the use of water as a weapon will be more become more likely.
The report, which focused on the Nile, Tigris-Euphrates, Mekong, Jordan, Indus, Brahmaputra, and Amu Darya water basins, states that the availability of potable water will not keep up with demand without better water management.
While environmentalists have pointed to agroecology, food sovereignty and viewing water as part of the commons as a path towards responsible water management, the intelligence report sees biotechnology, agricultural exports and virtual water trade as the way forward.
Today, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who requested the report, commented on the report in a speech at the State Department, saying, "As the world's population continues to grow, demand for water will go up but our fresh water supplies will not keep pace." "These difficulties will all increase the risk of instability within and between states," she said.
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The report: Global Water Security
- We assess that during the next 10 years, water problems will contribute to instability in states important to US national security interests. Water shortages, poor water quality, and floods by themselves are unlikely to result in state failure. However, water problems— when combined with poverty, social tensions, environmental degradation, ineffectual leadership, and weak political institutions— contribute to social disruptions that can result in state failure.
- We assess that a water-related state-on-state conflict is unlikely during the next 10 years. Historically, water tensions have led to more water-sharing agreements than violent conflicts. However, we judge that as water shortages become more acute beyond the next 10 years, water in shared basins will increasingly be used as leverage; the use of water as a weapon or to further terrorist objectives also will become more likely beyond 10 years.
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The report notes that agriculture is responsible for approximately 70 percent of the global fresh water supply, and implies the need for geneticically modifed crops to deal with the decreasing water supply. From the report:
• Research to develop drought resistance in crops has been conducted for several decades, but no commercialization exists to date. During the next three decades, selected crops could be developed that require half the water used by current crops, but widespread cultivation of such crops is problematic.
• Limited experiments are being conducted to develop food plants that can tolerate salt or waste water. The advances in biotechnology may result in new plants or genetically altered strains that can grow in salt water from the ocean or large saltwater aquifers.
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It also touts virtual water trade as one of "the best solutions for water problems" and says that the U.S. will lead in the export of virtual water:
The United States is also one of the highest exporters of “virtual water” (water consumed in the manufacturing or growing of an export product), providing numerous opportunities for engagement with the rest of the world.
The reports sees other countries' water scarcity as a boon for U.S. exports:
The United States can benefit from an increased demand for agricultural exports as water scarcity increases in various parts of the world. This would be especially true if states expecting increased water scarcity rely upon open markets instead of seeking bilateral land-lease arrangements in other countries to achieve their food security.
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Today, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who requested the report, commented on the report in a speech at the State Department.
"I think it's fair to say the intelligence community's findings are sobering."
"As the world's population continues to grow, demand for water will go up but our fresh water supplies will not keep pace."
"These difficulties will all increase the risk of instability within and between states," she said.
"Within states they could cause some states to fail outright. And between and among states, you could see regional conflicts among states that share water basins be exacerbated and even lead to violence."
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65 Comments so far
Show AllMeanwhile back at the ranch saying there are too many humans on planet earth is a taboo subject correct, and we must avoid all taboo subjects that make people uncomfortable and sweep them under the carpet. Whew, thank goodness most of the right opposes even voluntary population reduction for religious reasons, and the left because it's taboo to admit that the poor might do anything dysfunctional EVER. And yes I am aware people in the third world are poor due in large part to western imperialist resource grabs, and that, that stopping that is a huge part of the solution, that doesn't ALSO mean we get to ignore the environment that has left us with eroded soil, water shortages, local ecological overshoots, etc.
We have a similar situation in the American west with the Colorado River Compact, which divides the water among 7 states. The movie Chinatown reflected water wars.
And our demand for oil will harm our supply of water (it already has) by polluting our oceans, rivers, and streams, and more importantly, by polluting our aquifers.
It warms my heart that the US military has found more reasons to continue its perpetual war on the world. We already had our first war for water (at least partially) last year, when the US conquered one of the largest fresh water aquifers in the world -- the Nubian Sandstone Aquifer System.
in 'Coffins', the main subject is a man who holds the rights to a local river, and his murderous means of maintaining such control as conflicts arise...
even one of my favorite Disney movies, as a child, revolved around water hoarding in the opening West...
When driving a team of mules, scudda hoo means turn left and succda hay turn right.
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middleeast/2009/10/20091026132714361238.html
Israel is denying Palestinians adequate access to clean, safe water while allowing almost unlimited supplies to Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank, human rights group Amnesty International has said.
"Swimming pools, well-watered lawns and large irrigated farms in Israeli settlements... stand in stark contrast next to Palestinian villages whose inhabitants struggle even to meet their domestic water needs,"
Again your theories are mere conspiratorial tripe.
One of the the things that the Israelis have said is that they only confiscate disused land. In the past they have taken over wells, and cut off the water supply, thus preventing irrigation. Then they take over the now "disused" land.
And we think gasoline is expensive... Biggggg profits for bottled water... They don't have to add four tablespoons of expensive sugar or four tablespoons of health damaging "sugar free" chemicals to sweeten it.
Say what you may about Coke and Pepsi, but thank them kindly for insuring we will always have fancy named bottled drinking water.
The truth is.... Global warming is not at all funny... Everyone was well warned and the warnings have been ignored by the vast majority and our elected leaders.
Stock up on ice cubes because it is going to be very, very hot too. These 30 to 35 degrees above average temperatures we are now seeing are not record setting above the (average)...They are 30 to 35 degrees above the (record)... More to come,,, be prepared.
What's our water doing in their river, anyway?
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I'm sure the world's poor will rest easy in the knowledge they won't suffer from virtual thirst.
you say:
~ As for meat, I used to hear that Squirrel stew was good and they live off the naturally grown nut trees that hold water in the soil and cause rain. If the right type is grown their nuts are edible by people too. ~
squirrel intrigued me, so I looked around...
a squirrel's meat has around 26g protein per 3oz, and 100mg cholesterol...pretty low measurements in the other nutritional categories...
I couldn't find specifics on their nuts, although I'm not sure I'd be first in line to eat them, anyway...
'take 2, they're small'...
We will see the Elite taunt the poor and thirsty with the cast off, filthy and sodden towels they discard from their dining.
And we will see war over the most precious substance in the universe.
From the O. C. Bible: "From water does all life begin."
'Dune' was truly a prophet's parable...
"The report notes that agriculture is responsible for approximately 70 percent of the global fresh water supply, and implies the need for geneticically modifed crops to deal with the decreasing water supply. From the report:
• Research to develop drought resistance in crops has been conducted for several decades, but no commercialization exists to date. During the next three decades, selected crops could be developed that require half the water used by current crops, but widespread cultivation of such crops is problematic."
Why don't people just stop eating meat?! since 80 - 90% of the grains grown are grown to feed to livestock, which is a complete WASTE, highly pollutive of water (the greatest source of water pollution in the US). There is no need for "drought resistant crops" and all this technological bullshit. What is needed is straight talk about the devastating consequences--for water, for the climate, for animals, etc. of a meat-based diet.
The Wall Street magic bullet (GMO FrankenFood) will save us all! That's all that's needed according to the Robber Baron Repressive Report.
My Water bill was hitting the thousands annually out in the Mojave Desert. I dropped that place and the one acre lawn like a bad habit. I'm in the Tropics now. I moved here cuz it's got three wells and two fish ponds with natural springs under them. There's even a river running all the way around the property. Guess What? It's hot and smokey. Trees are croaking all over the place just like they are in Hawaii. The ponds and the river have nearly dried up. No one's ever seen it so damned hot.
No one can afford LP cooking gas anymore, so no tree is safe on this island. Chain saws are going off in all directions since the smokey business of making cooking charcoal is all that's left. Making Charcoal is not a nice process. The whole tree is set on fire and then buried under dirt for days putting out massive smoke and heat. Soon the SuperTyphoons will be back since the Ocean is so damned hot. The Tropics have swelled and the atmosphere is taller here now. Supercells 70,000 feet tall now annually wash hundreds of natives into the ocean.
Thanks a lot Wall Street for making my life a living hell on Earth. Only with your Mobster Voodoo "Free Market" could gas prices increase in the face of falling demand. We're in an undeclared depression for christ's sakes. Your hoarding of food, water and energy just to artificially drive up prices means we should nationalize all of Wall Street so this can't happen anymore.