Perilous Times
Water crisis plaguing Asia: official
June 30, 2010 - 2:34PM
AFP
Asia is in the grip of a water crisis that could set back the region's
robust economic growth if left unresolved, according to a top Asian
Development Bank (ADB) official.
Arjun Thapan, special adviser to ADB president Harukiko Kuroda on water
and infrastructure issues, said governments must start managing the
resource better to prevent the problem from worsening.
"We certainly believe that Asia is in the grip of a water crisis and
one that is becoming more serious over time," Thapan told AFP on the
sidelines of a water and urban planning conference in Singapore.
"We believe that the estimate recently made about Asia having a 40 per
cent gap between demand and supply by 2030 is a reasonable estimate."
With 80 per cent of Asia's water used to irrigate agricultural lands,
the shortage could have serious implications for food supplies, he
warned.
Between 10 and 15 per cent of Asia's water is consumed by industry.
Thapan said that the efficiency of water usage in agriculture and
industry has improved by only one per cent a year since 1990.
"It's been business as usual," said Thapan, a speaker at Singapore
International Water Week from June 28-July 1.
"Unless you radically improve the rate of efficiency of water use both
in agriculture and in industry, you are not going to close the gap
between demand and supply in 2030."
In China, thermal power generation is the biggest industrial water
user, he said, noting that biofuels are also "notoriously water
intensive".
Thapan said that if left unresolved, the water crisis "has the
potential of slowing down" Asian growth.
To manage water usage well, people should be charged for the volume
that they consume, regardless of whether water is managed by a private
company or a public entity, said Thapan.
"Water cannot any longer be seen as a free and never-ending natural
resource. It is a finite resource," he said.
While Asia's rapidly burgeoning cities are key economic drivers, many
are also inefficient water users, and this should prompt government
policy makers to implement reforms quickly.
Singapore's National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan told the
conference on Tuesday that about 200,000 more people every day move
into cities and towns from rural areas.
Every three days, the equivalent of a new city the size of Seattle or
Amsterdam emerges, said Mah, adding that by 2050, 70 per cent of the
global population will be living in cities, up from 50 per cent
currently.
Thapan said that "unless you measure the water that is being used, and
you price that water, there is no way in which you can manage the
demand".
"Singapore does a great job of conserving its water by making sure that
the price is right, by making sure that waste water is properly
reused," he said.
"Israel does that. There are lessons to be learned from these
experiences."
Another problem is the volume of used water in Asia that remains
largely untreated, leading to massive pollution of water sources such
as rivers.
Of the 412 rivers in the Philippines, 50 are biologically dead, he said.
Between $US2 billion ($A2.4 billion) and $US2.5 billion ($A2.9 billion)
dollars is needed to clean up Manila Bay and Pasig River in Manila
alone.
In China, India and the Philippines, among other Asian countries, the
total availability of water per person per year has fallen below 1700
cubic metres - the global threshold for water stress, a situation where
water demand exceeds the available amount during a certain period.
About 50 per cent of China's Yellow River is so polluted it cannot
support agriculture, and more than 50 per cent of the surface water in
the country's Hai river basin is not fit for any use, Thapan said.
So is there still time?
"There is time, but again much will depend on how quickly you craft
your water transformation agendas and how quickly you are able to
implement them," Thapan said.
"This is serious business and unless governments and communities take
this seriously now, the water stress will grow."