'More crop per drop'. (PopulationWatch).Intensification of water scarcity is an unpleasant reality in many emerging economies of the world. However, the causes of water scarcity sometimes differ. Research at the International Water Management Institute (IWMI IWMI International Water Management Institute (Sri Lanka) IWMI Inferior Wall Myocardial Infarction ) suggests that tackling water scarcity implies quite different challenges in Africa where it is predominantly "economic" and in Asia where it is "physical". In Africa, it is a question of promoting judicious creation of new hydraulic capital, but in Asia water scarcity is about an unsustainably large number of rural poor living off a limited base of natural resources, particularly fresh water. In the UN Millennium Summit The Millennium Summit was a meeting among many world leaders lasting three days from 6 September[1] to 8 September 2000[2] at the United Nations headquarters in New York City. in September 2000, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan Kofi Atta Annan (born April 8, 1938) is a Ghanaian diplomat who served as the seventh Secretary-General of the United Nations from January 1 1997 to January 1 2007, serving two five-year terms. He was the co-recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize in 2001. echoed a decade of IWMI research when he said that "we need a 'Blue Revolution' in agriculture that focuses on increasing productivity per unit of water--'more crop per drop'." New IWMI research suggests we also need more "cash per drop" and "more jobs per drop". Over decades of economic progress, the industrialized in·dus·tri·al·ize v. in·dus·tri·al·ized, in·dus·tri·al·iz·ing, in·dus·tri·al·iz·es v.tr. 1. To develop industry in (a country or society, for example). 2. world has evolved approaches that are now helping them manage their freshwater well. These approaches have held a powerful sway over global water thinking in recent years and yielded stylized styl·ize tr.v. styl·ized, styl·iz·ing, styl·iz·es 1. To restrict or make conform to a particular style. 2. To represent conventionally; conventionalize. approaches, whose common refrain is integrated management of water and land resources Noun 1. land resources - natural resources in the form of arable land natural resource, natural resources - resources (actual and potential) supplied by nature in a river basin framework. Policy prescriptions implied are transform fragmented territorial water institutions into integrated river basin organizations; price water to reflect its scarcity; institute tradable property rights; and establish appropriate legal and regulatory mechanisms for effective demand management. Adopting these policies, however, creates new difficulties and tensions because they fail to factor in three aspects of the fresh water challenge facing water-scarce countries: what drives their irrigation irrigation, in agriculture, artificial watering of the land. Although used chiefly in regions with annual rainfall of less than 20 in. (51 cm), it is also used in wetter areas to grow certain crops, e.g., rice. economies; how best to influence their water users; and how will their fresh water situation respond to their overall economic evolution. Irrigation is at the heart of the water scarcity in water stressed regions. But for irrigation, India's freshwater challenge would be much easier to meet. And the first world has never dealt with irrigation on the scale we find in water-stressed countries. Seventy per cent of the world's irrigated areas are in Asia, and much future irrigation development will occur in Africa. These countries need irrigation because of three reasons--extreme climate, high population pressure, and low levels of economic development, occurring all at once. South Asian and North China plains would find it easier to preserve their freshwater if they had lower population density as in Australia or Israel, better water endowments as in Canada, a more favourable rainfall pattern and climate as in Europe, a well-developed industrial and service economy as in the Asian tigers, or a strategic resource like oil as in Iraq, Iran or Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia (sä `dē ərā`bēə, sou`–, sô–), officially Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, kingdom (2005 est. pop. . Since they have none of these, their
only hope is in squeezing more crops, cash and livelihoods from every
drop of water, until they can substantially ease population pressure on
agriculture. Growing food for their large populations is formidable
enough a challenge for South Asia This article is about the geopolitical region in Asia. For geophysical treatments, see Indian subcontinent. South Asia, also known as Southern Asia and China; but even more formidable is the challenge of providing secure livelihoods for large segments of rural population dependent on farming. In the industrialized world today, notions of how water should be managed are conditioned by the way the water sector is organized. After centuries of economic growth, populations have concentrated in urban agglomerations near the estuaries. Municipal and industrial uses of water have rapidly increased, while agricultural use of "managed" water has shrunk. Most water users are served by service-providing agencies that are amenable to regulation and economic management. Water has become an "industry"; and like in any industry, pricing has become an effective tool for water demand management, as well as for funds generation for maintaining and improving hydraulic infrastructure. The key freshwater management challenge is allocating water between alternative uses, and the stage is set for river basin management. Developing countries in Asia and Africa are decades away from evolving their water sectors to this stage of maturity. Here, the water sector is largely informal; the majority of users get their water requirements directly from nature, from small decentralized de·cen·tral·ize v. de·cen·tral·ized, de·cen·tral·iz·ing, de·cen·tral·iz·es v.tr. 1. To distribute the administrative functions or powers of (a central authority) among several local authorities. storages or from groundwater, untrammeled by laws and regulatory frameworks and unmediated Adj. 1. unmediated - having no intervening persons, agents, conditions; "in direct sunlight"; "in direct contact with the voters"; "direct exposure to the disease"; "a direct link"; "the direct cause of the accident"; "direct vote" direct by service providers. Management of water demand is critical but nearly impossible, because of the challenge of regulating a vast number of tiny users. Just take the case of groundwater regulation. South Asia and North China's virtually unmanaged groundwater aquifers are being depleted de·plete tr.v. de·plet·ed, de·plet·ing, de·pletes To decrease the fullness of; use up or empty out. [Latin d by a colossal, informal groundwater economy whose growth has responded more to population density than to the availability of the resource (Debroy and Shah). This is as much a challenge in the western United States Noun 1. western United States - the region of the United States lying to the west of the Mississippi River West Santa Fe Trail - a trail that extends from Missouri to New Mexico; an important route for settlers moving west in the 19th century and Mexico. Yet, the problem is far more complex in Asia. The United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. uses 100 [km.sup.3] of groundwater every year, but the bulk of this is pumped by around 200,000 large pumps and benefits 2 per cent of the American people An American people may be:
Ironically, economic growth may well be the best healer for the ailing freshwater ecologies of the water-stressed world. As long as smallholder agriculture Smallholder Agriculture is the major form of food production in the world. Subsistence farming It is typically based on family farms in poor countries and is often associated with subsistence production - although this type of production is not absent in developed in Asia and Africa continues to act as the parking lot for the rural poor, their Governments will find it difficult to resist irrigation development. As economic progress generates off-farm livelihood opportunities, freshwater use in agriculture declines or becomes easier to regulate. During three decades of rapid growth in some parts of east Asia, for example, irrigated areas fell by 40 per cent; and a similar trend is emerging in Mexico. The IWMI analysis, with the help of the new Water Poverty Index developed by scientists at Keel and Wallingford, suggests that the access to water depends not so much on physical water resources of a country but on its GNP/capita. It shows that the quality of freshwater too seems to follow the inverted inverted reverse in position, direction or order. inverted L block a pattern of local filtration anesthesia commonly used in laparotomy in the ox. Kuznets' curve: declining in early stages of economic growth but rising as countries improve their standard of living, regardless of physical endowments of water resources (Shah 2003b). The challenge before the water-stressed world is to chalk out to sketch with, or as with, chalk; to outline; to indicate; to plan. - Burke. See also: Chalk what Peter Gleick has called the "soft water path" to economic growth, which is more mindful of the value of preserving freshwater in the strategic choices it makes for growing its economy. NGO NGO abbr. nongovernmental organization Noun 1. NGO - an organization that is not part of the local or state or federal government nongovernmental organization efforts to popularize pop·u·lar·ize tr.v. pop·u·lar·ized, pop·u·lar·iz·ing, pop·u·lar·iz·es 1. To make popular: A famous dancer popularized the new hairstyle. 2. low-cost micro-irrigation technologies in South Asia, people's movement to use rainwater harvesting and recharge aquifers in western India and up-land areas of China, the enthusiasm in southern India, the United Republic of Tanzania and Ghana to reinvent the social uses of age-old tanks and ponds in local water supply and irrigation systems--all these exemplify unique responses of water-stressed regions to their unique freshwater challenges. These deserve more and empathetic em·pa·thet·ic adj. Empathic. em pa·thet i·cal·ly adv. international attention and
support than they get now. In part, this is because of the dominant
belief that today's developing world will solve its freshwater
problems in much the same way as the first world did decades ago.It is doubtful if this will be the case entirely. The world needs to help water-stressed developing countries devise freshwater management strategies appropriate to their socio-ecological context and the genius of their people. The most important role the United Nations can play is that of creating a larger common ground between the water wisdom developed in the industrialized world and a textured understanding of the freshwater challenges facing the water stressed regions and of unique innovations being tried out in parts of Asia and Africa.
Role of South Asia's Groundwater-based Agrarian Economy
No. of
agricultural
ground-
Annual water Extraction/
groundwater structures structure
Country use ([km.sup.3]) (million) ([m.sup.3]/year)
India 150 19 7,900
Pakistan-Punjab 45 0.5 90,000
China 75 3.5 21,500
Iran 29 0.5 58,000
Mexico 29 0.07 414,285
United States 100 0.2 500,000
% of population
dependent
directly or
indirectly on
groundwater
Country irrigation
India 55-60
Pakistan-Punjab 60-65
China 22-25
Iran 12-18
Mexico 5-6
United States <1-2
References Shah, Tushaar, Ian Makin, R. Sakthivadivel and M. Samad (2002) "Limits to Leapfrogging: Issues in Transposing Successful River Basin Management Institutions in the Developing World". Charles L Abernethy, Ed. Intersectoral Management of River Basins. Colombo: International Water Management Institute. Debroy, Aditi and Tushaar Shah (2003) "Groundwater Socioecology Socioecology is the scientific study of how social structure and organisation are influenced by organisms' environment. Socioecology is related to sociology, the study of society, and ecology, the study of the interaction between organisms and their environment. of South Asia". Custodio, E. and R. Llamas, Eds. Intensive Use of Groundwater: Challenges and Opportunities. Amsterdam: Swets & Zeillinger. Shah, Tushaar (2003a) "Governing the Groundwater Economy: Comparative Analysis of National Institutions and Policies In South Asia, China and Mexico". Paper presented at SINEX SINEX Solution Independent Exchange format Conference, Valencia, Spain, 7-10 December 2002. Shah, Tushaar (2003b) "Water Poverty of Nations: Its Causes and Remedies". Internal paper. Anand: International Water Management Institute. Tushaar Shah, winner of the 2002 Outstanding Scientist of the Year award of the CGIAR CGIAR Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research , is a principal scientist with the International Water Management Institute, Colombo, Sri Lanka, a Future Harvest centre engaged in research on ways to improve productivity of water for food, livelihoods and nature. |
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`dē ərā`bēə, sou`–, sô–)
pa·thet
i·cal·ly adv.
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