Another Water World Is Possible
Managing World Water
With climate change deepening the water crisis, wonky discussions of how to manage our water systems are suddenly attracting increased public attention. "Unlike oil, there's no substitute for fresh water," says Maude Barlow, senior advisor on water to the president of the United Nations General Assembly. "We all need it."
This recognition of the indispensability of water has raised the profile of groups arguing for treating water as a common good. In recent years across Latin America and Africa, consumer, human rights, and environmental organizations have campaigned successfully on referenda for constitutional amendments and laws enshrining water as a human right. At the recent World Water Forum, 25 countries signed an alternative declaration affirming that right (the official declaration weakly suggested that it was simply a human need). Here in the United States, a bi-partisan group of Vermont legislators working with the citizen's group, Vermont Natural Resources Council, co-sponsored legislation to protect that state's groundwater. The 2008 law declares groundwater a public trust and requires industries to acquire permits for withdrawals of over 56,000 gallons a day.
Yet it remains an uphill battle to shift the narrative, policies, and laws to ensure that water is managed as a commons and a human right. This work is made more difficult by the fact that the principal forum for global water policy discussions is not the UN but the World Water Forum, a mostly pro-privatization, tri-annual gathering of government delegations, non-governmental organizations, international financial institutions, and private industry representatives. It is convened by the World Water Council, a French non-profit whose board of governors is dominated by water privateers.
Full Cost Recovery
At the latest World Water Forum meeting from March 16th to 22nd in Istanbul, neoliberal water-management prescriptions varied little. Whether discussing the Parisian water system or South African townships, the prescription was the same: full cost recovery. In other words, agencies that provide water must recover the full costs associated with delivering the service. Increasingly pro-water-privatization development agencies, such as the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), are insisting that consumers pay more for water.
Full cost recovery policy is immoral, claim organizers of the People's Water Forum - a parallel gathering advocating for water to be managed as a commons for all rather than a commodity for profit. Moreover, such a corporate strategy lacks creativity and is applied only selectively. That is, poor users who consume the least amount of water bear a disproportionate burden. Instead, progressive taxation programs could support public water systems just as they do public schools.
Consider the example of the Finnish company Botnia, operating in Uruguay. Its production of cellulose products consumes 80 million liters of water per day, using a large percentage of the daily output of Uruguay's public utilities at a low, subsidized price. Similar regressive anti-conservation subsidies are found throughout the world - especially in the United States - where irrigation water is priced far below cost, a boon for water intensive agribusinesses and a blow to family farmers. Unlike air, it costs money to deliver water, so we must put a price on its management while taking care not to turn the water itself into a commodity. But the largest users - and the wealthiest users - should pay their fair share and subsidize consumption for the world's poorest families.
For the average person simply concerned about getting water to those who need it, this polarization in water management strategies may well be confusing. How is one to judge which water policies are effective and which are wrong-headed? When two water conferences recently faced off in Istanbul - the industry-backed World Water Forum and the activist People's Water Forum - the debate highlighted these stark tensions. But the discussion, in identifying some common ground, also took hopeful steps forward.
Another Water World Is Possible
Around the world, both activists and government officials have challenged the way we think about water. In Bangladesh and Brazil and through public-public partnerships around the world, public water utilities are seeking out public loans rather than private equity to improve water delivery infrastructure. These public utilities seek to learn together to overcome management, engineering, and financial obstacles. They are bucking the privatization trend, refusing development bank financing when conditioned on the privatization of their utilities.
Such innovative financing approaches go hand in hand with new approaches to water management. Local authorities in Rajasthan, India, for instance, are organizing water governance around natural contours - the world's river basins. There, the citizens group Tarun Bharat Sangh constructs johads, earthen small-scale reservoirs that help to harvest rainwater and improve the recharge of groundwater resources. In Rajasthan, as well as newly enshrined in the Ecuadoran constitution, citizens view water not just as a human right but as a right of the earth.
Maude Barlow suggests 10 principles to create and manage a water commons. The principles are broad-ranging, from applying human rights and public trust law to ensuring conservation and improved public delivery. She, too, sees privatization of water supplies as antithetical to this notion of the commons. She cites the case of Felton, California, which has taken back its public water system from a failed privatization experience. Further south, through trial and error, Cochabamba, Bolivia is experimenting with community-managed water utilities to deliver quality water at fair prices. In South Africa, communities have rejected pre-paid water meters and pricing schemes that undermine families' water security.
Adriana Marquisio, president of Uruguay's water workers union, insists that public water management must be improved but is equally adamant that water remain a public good. She calls for measuring efficiency not just in terms of liters per second but through public oversight over water fees and system improvements, public health indicators, innovations in community management, and the ecological health of groundwater reserves.
Flawed U.S. Policy
A principal U.S. policy tool for solving the world water crisis is the Senator Paul Simon Water for the World Act of 2009. This act builds on a similar law signed by President Bush in 2005. The bill seeks to provide "100 million of the world's poorest with sustainable drinking water and sanitation by 2015." Operationally, the proposed law establishes an Office of Water within USAID, an agency that embodies the entrepreneurial and privatizing spirit associated with shrinking the public sector.
If passed, the Water for the World Act will further enable the role of private investment in public drinking and waste water infrastructure in developing nations, according to Wenonah Hauter, executive director of Food and Water Watch. "Water privatization has proven a commercial failure in most countries around the world because private companies have, time and again, proven incapable of meeting their obligations to both their customers and their shareholders," she argues. "Reinforcing the role of private investment in the water infrastructure systems of developing countries will only perpetuate the problems that this well-intended act is designed to solve. Instead, we must work with developing countries to implement sound water policies based on public management of this essential resource."
In reports to Congress, USAID largely measured its success in implementing the Simon water acts by the amount of dollars spent on water systems. Investments in extending service and repairing ailing infrastructure are certainly critical. In this time of financial crisis, these ought to be a core part of public spending programs to reactivate the global economy. However, it matters a great deal how the money is spent, with what oversight and based on what political agenda. Certainly, the recent damage caused by channeling public monies to poorly regulated mortgage companies ought to offer pause about a similar strategy for water. These funds must be channeled to local governments and public utilities (with no strings attached mandating privatization) and to non-governmental organizations working on community-led, commons-based water strategies.
The Obama administration's performance at the World Water Forum was lackluster. It did not sign the alternative declarations to declare water a human right or seek to move policy deliberations to the UN. Whether the administration's plate is too full to pay attention or it is intentionally repeating the Bush administration's poor stewardship of the globe's natural resources is still unclear.
In his inaugural address, President Obama promised to the world's people "to make your farms flourish and let clean waters flow." So there is hope that the administration has been too busy to give this important issue proper attention. But hope is a poor substitute for action. It is still early on in the new administration, time enough to press for change. That change will happen when citizens insist that water debates are public debates about how to best manage our common water resources.
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12 Comments so far
Show AllWow, all human beings water to live upon planet earth. Thank's for letting this old Indian know that info?
I wonder if Creator knows that, too?
Just another day of my journey being completed through your world. Once I leave your world I will no longer need any of your God of Green Paper to live, nor have to render unto Caesar what is Caesar's anymore.
Even Jesus had to render unto Caesar what is Caesar's wherever & if applicable.
I wonder if Old Mr. Power of Life Over Death knew when he said render unto Caesar, that it may look like Caesar is building some really grand worldly paradise here upon the earth in the long run all Caesar will do is build Hell on Earth?
It's difficult telling what all Creator & Jesus know?
Life is good. What an experience! It's always best to forgive.
I remember, I believe it was on NOW when Bill Moyers still had it, a program on water. One of those interviewed was T Boone Pickens, who was telling how he had cornered all the water production in the panhandle. I believe his theme was, "anybody can have water, if he pays the price."
There is a handful of them out there, quietly buying up essential resources and counting their future profits, billionaires all.
snydly
The top 1% is ruining our world and the CORPORATION is the horse they rode in on.
Strip corporations of legal "personhood".
AMEN
Possible? Shit. You're only now figuring this out? I've seen it coming since 2001 and only NOW people are starting to get it? These sons of bitches have been (obviously) getting the ball rolling on a DELIBERATE WORLD WAR since GW the Chimp and his Antichrist master Cheney stole office in 2000. I'm positive the plans were in the works for at least a decade before that. I'm terrified and pissed off at the same time. I want to find somewhere to hide, and at the same time I wish there was a national reaction the likes of which we saw after the Rodney King trials saw the pigs walk scott-free. Where the hell is the outrage in this country? Fifteen years ago some cops get away with beating a black man near to death and the whole west coast took to the streets. After the sham of 911, three wars (yes - three if you count Pakistan), and the utter looting of the treasury, and the gutting of our Bill of Rights, and NOBODY is flipping out? WHAT WILL IT TAKE?
I just want to leave this fucked up country. The nation I learned about in school was as much a lie as the tooth fairy. Fuck law and order. It's a lie. Anarchists are positively saintly compared to the lawlessness our government and their corporate owners are shoving down our throats. I'm beginning to think maybe humanity deserves to extinguish itself. I used to be merciful and compassionate, but now I would like to see some payback, and see some war pigs undergo some of their own Guantanimo treatment, then be hung by the neck till dead, in public. It would be positively wholesome family entertainment after the obscenity of the 'news' and all the Disney consumerist pimping we see in this country. The truth, while violent, is less obscene than the shit we've been fed. I've tried to remain peaceful, and hopeful that we could repair this country, but it is clear that organized crime, criminal multinational corporations, and global fascists have seized this country and are driving it like a stolen car. No more cooperation from me.
kogwonton - I often find myself thinking more like you and your comment. For years, when I expressed an opinion and someone said, "You're a liberal!", I would reply, "NO, I am not a liberal, I am an anarchist! I detest them all!"
Whoa, careful -- revolutions that do not at some point manage a respect for human rights enshrine the horrors of the regimes they oppose.
"Choose your enemy carefully, for he is who you will become." I'm told this is an old Jewish saying, and look at Israel in Gaza and the West Bank.
also, if we don't get the water thing right, we'll probably never have a chance to have the same discussion about land ownership and use, as we'll perish first...
As long as the US financial industry remains unregulated and the US Federal Reserve exists, water will just be another commodity that is subject to unregulated speculation and manipulation.
Obama is enabling more corporations to become too big to fail, promoting more corporate welfare and the continuation of low interest rates within an unregulated financial industry, thereby assuring that speculators have unlimited opportunity to control and manipulate water prices.
The Federal Reserve does not need Congressional approval to hand out money to the same speculators with US taxpayers footing the bill.
"Unlike air, it costs money to deliver water, so we must put a price on its management while taking care not to turn the water itself into a commodity."
It only costs money to deliver water through manmade infrastructure...man has no control, at this point, over whether water will continue to fall in historical patterns, upon which all delivery systems rely (as well as much of the cooling for nuke plants, but that's another tale)...water is the inherent right, and primary ingredient, in all life, and humans have no right to ruin it for each other, or any of the other myriad creatures and plants...
"How is one to judge which water policies are effective and which are wrong-headed?"
If water needed for survival is denied in favor of industry, that is wrong-headed...
Global Start Date: September 22, 2012...water for survival first and only, and let industry go begging...let's get those gardens growing!
Let's start by making fresh water available in abundant quantities in arid regions where there was none before. Not only can the recovered fresh water be applied directly to agricultural production in these arid regions, some of it can be recovered for drinking!
It can be done via techniques given at http://www.seawatergreenhouse.com
As Maude Barlow quotes in one of her speeches, If one takes water from a water rich area and moves it to a desert, eventually you will have two deserts. In nearly all instances there is no "recovered" water as you state, because of evaporation to an arid air mass and loss to a porous soil that will not hold water. Desalination is indeed possible, but not really practical in my opinion. Yes, we have the technology, but that does not mean we should use it to support life in an area that nature did not provide such life to exist. Again, from Maude Barlow's speeches, the modern philosophy is that water should remain in it's natural watershed to the greatest extent possible, and used locally to the greatest extent possible.