Home Articles The Creative Secrets of Water: 16 chapters Part 12b - Water and the Future
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Part 12b - Water and the Future

Welcome again to this 2nd part of Water and the Future, in the

Healing Water Institute series, the Creative Secrets of Water.

 

2/ Uses and Abuses of Fresh Water

 

Picking up on the fact that agriculture, in its task to feed

us all, uses 70% of humanity's fresh water supply, it follows

that it is agriculture that should be required to make drastic

changes to conserve water, especially through irrigation which

uses most of this amount.

 

The main thing is stop broadcast soaking of land, and introduce

more direct plant drip supply tailored to exact growth needs.

Israel is a good example of this.

 

The over pumping of groundwater by the world's farmers exceeds

natural replenishment by at least 160 billion cubic metres a

year! This a global average. Poorer countries tend to water

what is just needed while richer ones are using enough to drain

their own resources permanently within this century.

 

Over one quarter of the world's farmland is now waterlogged,

where water is unable to drain away out of the oversoaked water

table, with irrigation so over applied, previous crops cannot

be grown or are underperforming.

 

Education about the facts and best methods, plus legislation

and commercial incentives needs to be introduced to create

rapid change.

 

Also agricultural methods need reviewing urgently worldwide,

as is happening at government level in the European Union

around the nearly dead Baltic Sea.

 

Agri-business super phosphates and poisons, dropping into water

tables flowing into streams and lakes, cause massive growth

of weeds, oxygen depletion and pollution even out in the seas.

 

These agri-business methods have also caused topsoil

saltpans with reduced nutrients in 1/8th of the world's

farmland in the so-called 'green revolution'.

 

Fortunately, real green revolutions are happening in places

like India, where at present rates of growth, all of India's

village agriculture will be Biodynamic in ten years time. And

one of the great benefits is the replenishment of artesian

water supplies.

 

Organic and Biodynamic methods use half the water of the

synthetic farming method using super phosphates, because the

organics' soil is filled with nutrients that hold water and

feed the water table in a healthy manner.

(see www.howtosavetheworld.co.nz)

 

Regarding industrial use of water in factories, we find most

water is used in the manufacture of organic products, including

foods. 

 

Control of water quality is improving fast but tragically much

pollution is seen as impossible to stop by those abusing it.

 

In developed countries progress has been made in combating

water pollution, either by reducing the amount of water used,

especially when it has to be paid for, or by legislation, fines

and genuine concern for the planet.

 

Nevertheless, according to www.WaterYear2003.org about 400

million tons of heavy metals, solvents, toxic sludge, and other

wastes result each year from industry, with 70% of this dumped

untreated to pollute the usable water supply!  This is some

20 million tons of heavily polluted water per year! This is

completely unacceptable and is taking too long to reverse.

 

Personal use of water is vast, but is still only 8% of total

human use of fresh water.

 

If only the commercial compost toilet had been developed in

England in the early 1800s, instead of the ubiquitous flush

toilet that has spread worldwide! Or if sea water had been

used for toilets and clothes washing once pumps were good

enough.

 

The forces of inertia around new ideas being applied is

strong and not until the problem is extremely pressing will

such measures be even considered applicable on a widescale

basis. The future costs are going to be extreme with our short

term planning habits pushing solutions out into the future.

 

The conservation of water supplies by collecting and

harvesting rainwater is a high priorty and can be developed

at the same time as new flood control infrastructure. Methods

are being developed to trap water runoff and encourage it to

feed down into artesian supplies and could be developed large

scale.

 

IDeas as simple as urban homes collecting roof water into tanks

as their country cousins do, would greatly reduce the load on

city supply infrastructure and usage.

 

In very dry countries people are so careful with water they

even develop ways of harvesting dew condensation for

agriculture. Water rich areas can learn much from these

habits in poorer areas.

 

One of the best ways of water conservation is tree planting.

Moisture and rain is attracted to forests, which store the

water in the root-activated ground and then clean it through the

transpiration up the trunks and back into the air.

 

It is wonderful to be able to report that the tree cover of

Europe and America are now reported to be higher than it was

80 years ago, while tropical forests are still being cleared

so widely their carbon dioxide output from burning trees equals

that of worldwide industry.

 

The urgent requirement to clean up industry and agriculture

is being taken seriously especially in the European Union,

which is setting standards for the world to follow.

 

Information Sources:

www.peopleandplanet.net.

www.wateryear2003.org

www.unesco.org/water/wwap/

www.bbc.co.uk  (search for 'water' and drill down!)

 

 

3/ Climate Change and Water Distribution.

 

It is clear now that climate change is caused mainly by human

beings, and when traced backwards, mainly as a result of our

style of thinking that invents such polluting machinery and

'conventional' farming methods.

 

However the answers are not final on what will happen where

and when as a result. Nature will decide that.

 

One thing we do know is that the Rodale Institute has recently

shown that organic farms hold 30% more carbon in their soils than

'conventional' methods. By changing all farms over to 

organics a country can save up to 20% carbon emission in a few

simple years!

 

However, on the down side, aside from rising sea levels mixing

salt water into coastal fresh water aquifers, many countries

are going to have bigger droughts and others have greater

flooding.

 

A symptom of these times is a recent report that the city of

Sydney may not be livable by 2050 if water supplies continue

reducing the way they are. Desalination may be an expensive

answer with huge salt waste storage problems.

 

However drought ridden areas do have some hope, because of the

widespread, vast underground water supplies. With small

localised investment in wells, tree planting and microdams,

and careful use of this water, decent life styles can be created.

 

Areas of heavier flooding face catastrophic suffering and huge

costs to upgrade flood control and victim support. As of

writing, there are 20 million people seriously affected by

unusually heavy monsoonal flooding in the Indian subcontinent.

 

With many glaciers and lower snow levels melting without much

replenishment, major mountain-sourced rivers such as the Ganges

and Indus already have diminished flows. This creates localised

tensions, but it is good to note that Bangladesh and India

have a treaty in place for the shared use of the Ganges.

 

One thing is becoming clear. Whatever we took for granted

before, may not be available soon, or even now.

 

These problems will be localised, with each country having to

solve it for itself, but hopefully with global coordination.

 

A major concern is how countries will relate to each other

when severe water shortages affect one with a neighbour that

has plenty.

 

Even without the complicating factors from global warming, the

potable, or drinkable,  water crisis is already serious.

 

And for those who have good water on tap, it is important to

develop a global consciousness about this.

 

For water is a global element.

 

regards

 

Iain

 

Iain Trousdell
Co-Founder and Keynote Speaker
The Healing Water Institute
www.healingwaterinstitute.org

 

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