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    Is anyone experiencing water shortages in their neck of the woods? Here's an interesting on how serious this problem really is.

    Oops an interesting article from USA Today.


     


    Water shortages will leave world in dire straits


    By Dan Vergano, USA TODAY

    More than half of humanity will be living with water shortages, depleted fisheries and polluted coastlines within 50 years because of a worldwide water crisis, warns a United Nations report out Monday.

    Waste and inadequate management of water are the main culprits behind growing problems, particularly in poverty-ridden regions, says the study, the most comprehensive of its kind. The United Nations Environment Programme, working with more than 200 water resource experts worldwide, produced the report.


    "Tens of millions of people don't have access to safe water. It is indeed a crisis," says Halifa Drammeh, who coordinates UNEP's water policies. The wide-ranging report, part of the UN's designation of 2003 as the International Year of Freshwater, also documents problems such as steep drops in the size of Asia's Aral Sea, Africa's Lake Chad and Iraq's Marshlands; the deterioration of coral reefs; and the rise of coastal waters because of climate changes. Some developing nations could face water shortages, crop failures and conflict over shrinking lakes and rivers if nothing is done to prevent wasteful irrigation and slow evaporation from reservoirs, and drinking-water systems are not repaired.


    Based on data from NASA, the World Health Organization and other agencies, the report finds:



    • Severe water shortages affecting at least 400 million people today will affect 4 billion people by 2050. Southwestern states such as Arizona will face other severe freshwater shortages by 2025.

    • Adequate sanitation facilities are lacking for 2.4 billion people, about 40% of humankind.

    • Half of all coastal regions, where 1 billion people live, have degraded through overdevelopment or pollution.


    "The basic problem is poverty, not water," says water resources economist Chuck Howe of the University of Colorado in Boulder. About 90% of the severe problems are in developing nations, he says, where solutions to wasting water lie in better irrigation and water supply practices.


    In developed nations such as Japan, the USA and in Europe, most water shortfalls arise from politically popular but inefficient subsidies and protections of agriculture, which accounts for 85% of freshwater consumption worldwide.


    Along with drinking-water concerns, the report looks at global problems of oceans and seas:



    • Coral reefs, mangrove forests and sea grass beds, important grounds for young fish and for environmental needs, face threats from overfishing, development and pollution.

    • Oxygen-depleted seas, caused by industrial and agricultural runoff, could lead to fishery collapses and "dead zones" in such places as the Gulf of Mexico.

    • Wild-fish catches are leveling off worldwide. With 75% of fish stocks fully exploited, fleets have turned to fish lower on ocean food chains. Ecologists worry that entire fisheries will collapse as these "junk fish" are used up. Increased demand for fish is being made up through aquaculture, which brings other environmental concerns.


    Drammeh hopes the report helps mobilize support for international organizations brokering water and fishery agreements that encourage better water management among nations. Developing regions don't need more dam-building projects, he says, but need more people trained to manage water systems.


     

    +8  Views: 657 Answers: 10 Posted: 12 years ago

    10 Answers

    No shortage where I live in NH.

    digger

    New Hampshire. The Live or die Free state. My favorite camping vacation spot...and tax-free state to boot ! To all American camping enthusiasts: You must visit N.H. state parks.

    For the first time in 5 years or so Wivenhoe dam (Brisbane ,Australia) reached 100% capacity after being down to 23% during the drought. The first thing the gov't did was to throw 25% away,Downstream into the ocean because they didn't want to risk another flood.

    leeroy

    Water management in Florida a few years back made a similar mistake. Thy decided to drain Lake Okeechobee to make the fishing better...

    Well the next thing you know we had about a 7 year drought. Water Management's psychic must have been wrong, lol. I don't know how they think they can predict the future rainfall?

    California has the Pacific ocean to the west and that we can runout of water is an admission of stupidity and a lack of vision by government. I guess this is what we get when we pay people not to think.

    mycatsmom

    salt water can be coverted into fresh water. So, California and Texas should never be afraid of running out of water
    leeroy

    Desalinization plants are very costly, but I do believe that's the best way to solve this problem for states near the ocean.

    Governments just need the money and the willpower to improve their states. Both of these they are in short supply right now.
    robertgrist

    leery, every trivial thing in government cost a ridiculous fortune to do, simple electrical switch that we can buy for 75 cents in a hardware store can cost $35.00 where the government has to buy it by our laws. I’m sure a desalination plant can cost a billion dollars for the government to have built whereas the same facility can actually cost perhaps 1/50 as much….like I said, "stupidity and a lack of vision by government.” As a result, our government cannot afford to serve us like they should.

    Here in Yreka, California it is raining for the third day in a row. 60F  and overcast.  

    leeroy

    #
    Drought, Politics Trouble Farmers In California
    Enlarge John McChesney for NPR. Many fields along the Interstate 5 corridor on the west side of California's Central Valley are left dry, as farmers divert water ...
    https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=103950335
    #
    California Faces Water Rationing, Governor Proclaims Drought ...
    SACRAMENTO, California , February 27, 2009 (ENS) - Parched California is a step closer to mandatory water rationing today as Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger proclaimed ...
    https://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/feb2009/2009-02-27-093.asp - Cached
    #
    Governor Declares Drought in California
    The drought declaration — the first for the state since 1991 — includes orders to transfer water from less dry areas to those that are dangerously dry. Mr ...
    https://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/05/us/05drought.html
    country bumpkin

    Moderator
    Rain Hog! lol

    No water worries here in my neck of the woods.

    It's official Leeroy, I need glasses. All this time I thought the picture was a Navy Aircraft Carrier but,  now I can (barely) see  that it is an alligator.

    leeroy

    Sorry to hear that! Since I've turned 40 my eyesight has gotten worse for the last few years. I got glasses and now I already have to get new ones that are stronger.

    The laser eye surgery I've heard is very affordable, so I am considering that. I have already lost a 200 dollar pair of glasses and run over a 100 dollar pair as well. This is getting to expensive. lol.
    IamPamela313

    You are so funny countryB, some of your answers have me LMAO. Thanks for the laughter. lol!

    Why don't people just trap rain water, or dig themselves a well. If you don't know where a well is........then get a well witcher. It works !

    leeroy

    That's the only solution for some areas, but it will cost millions or billions to set up the runoff water to go into man made lakes or storage tanks.

    But I do think this is the best answer for some areas.

    Nope, b/c I live near the Great  Lakes, and the Detroit River;  which really isn't a river, it's a straights.  We get our water out of Lake Erie, the Det River and Lake St. Clair.  It goes thru a water processing plant to get all the gook out of it.

    leeroy

    I lived near Youngstown when I was a kid. They had great water up there.

    No, my catsmom, we are getting refugees from Afghanistan, Iran, Sri Lanka etc. they come by boat. They are very troublesome.

    Australia, mostly has water shortages, but it's rained so much this year our dams are almost full. The stupid Government keeps letting all the refugees in and our water demand escalates. It only rains along the coast of this country. The middle is desert.

    mycatsmom

    what refugees ? You're not having a war down there, are you ?


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