Great Lakes Article:
WATER DEFICITS GROWING IN MANY COUNTRIES
Water Shortages May Cause Food Shortages
Lester R. Brown
08/09/2002
The world is incurring a vast water deficit. It is largely
invisible, historically recent, and growing fast. Because this impending
crisis typically takes the form of aquifer overpumping
and falling water tables, it is not visible. Unlike burning forests or
invading sand dunes, falling water tables cannot be readily photographed.
They are often discovered only when wells go dry.
The world water deficit is recent--a product of the
tripling of water demand over the last half-century and the rapid worldwide
spread of powerful diesel and electrically driven pumps. The drilling of
millions of wells has pushed water withdrawals beyond the recharge of many
aquifers. The failure of governments to limit pumping to the sustainable
yield of aquifers means that water tables are now falling in scores of
countries.
We are consuming water that belongs to future
generations. In some countries, the fall of water tables is dramatic. In Yemen,
a country of 19 million, the water table under most of the country is
falling by roughly 2 meters a year as water use far exceeds the sustainable
yield of aquifers. World Bank official Christopher Ward observes that
"groundwater is being mined at such a rate that parts of the rural
economy could disappear within a generation."
In the basin where the capital, Sana'a, is located and
where the water table is falling 6 meters (nearly 20 feet) per year, the aquifer
will be depleted by the end of this decade. In the search for water, the
Yemeni government has drilled test wells in the basin that are 2 kilometers
(1.2 miles) deep, depths normally associated with the oil industry, but
they have failed to find water. Yemen
must soon decide whether to bring water to Sana'a, possibly from coastal
desalting plants, or to relocate the capital.
Iran,
a country of 70 million people, is facing an acute shortage of water. Under
the agriculturally rich Chenaran Plain in northeastern
Iran,
the water table was falling by 2.8 meters a year in the late 1990s. But in
2001 the cumulative effect of a three-year drought and the new wells being
drilled both for irrigation and to supply the nearby city of Mashad
dropped the aquifer by an extraordinary 8 meters. Villages in eastern Iran
are being abandoned as wells go dry, generating a swelling flow of water
refugees.
Shortages of water in Egypt,
which is entirely dependent on the Nile River,
are well known. With the Nile
now reduced to a trickle as it enters the Mediterranean,
the three principal countries of the Nile River Basin--Egypt,
Ethiopia,
and Sudan--can
each increase its take from the river only at the expense of the other two.
With the combined population of these countries projected to climb from 167
million today to 264 million in 2025, all three are facing growing grain
deficits as a result of water shortages.
In Mexico--home
to 104 million people and growing by 2 million per year--the demand for
water has outstripped supply in many states. In the agricultural state of Guanajuato, for example, the water table is falling by
1.8-3.3 meters a year. Mexico City's
water problems are legendary. How the United States
and Mexico
share the water of the Rio Grande
has become a thorny issue in U.S.-Mexican relations.
A World Bank study of the water balance in the North
China Plain calculated an annual deficit of 37 billion tons of water. Using
the rule of thumb of 1,000 tons of water to produce 1 ton of grain, this is
equal to 37 million tons of grain--enough to feed 111 million Chinese at
their current level of consumption. In effect, 111 million Chinese are
being fed with grain produced with water that belongs to their children.
Scores of other countries are running up regional water deficits, including
nearly all of those in Central Asia,
the Middle East,
and North Africa,
plus India,
Pakistan,
and the United States.
Historically, water shortages were local, but in an
increasingly integrated world economy, the shortfalls can cross national
boundaries via the international grain trade. Water-scarce countries often
satisfy the growing needs of cities and industry by diverting water from
irrigation and importing grain to offset the resulting loss of production.
Since a ton of grain equals 1,000 tons of water, importing grain is the
most efficient way to import water. World grain futures will soon in effect
become world water futures.
Although military conflicts over water are always a
possibility, future competition for water seems more likely to take place
in world grain markets. This can be seen with Iran
and Egypt,
both of which now import more wheat than Japan,
traditionally the world's leading importer. Imports supply 40 percent or
more of the total consumption of grain--wheat, rice, and feedgrains--in both countries. Numerous other
water-short countries also import much of their grain. Morocco
brings in half of its grain. For Algeria
and Saudi Arabia,
the figure is over 70 percent. Yemen
imports nearly 80 percent of its grain, and Israel,
more than 90 percent.
Seventy percent of world water use, including all the
water diverted from rivers and pumped from underground, is used for
irrigation, 20 percent is used by industry, and 10 percent goes to
residences. Thus if the world is facing a water shortage, it is also facing
a food shortage. Water deficits, which are already spurring heavy grain
imports in numerous smaller countries, may soon do the same in larger
countries, such as China
or India.
Even with the overpumping of
its aquifers, China
is developing a grain deficit. After rising to an historical peak of 392
million tons in 1998, grain production in the world's largest nation fell
below 350 million tons in 2000, 2001, and 2002. The resulting annual
deficits of 40 million tons or so have been filled by drawing down the
country's extensive grain reserves. But if this situation continues, China
soon will be forced to turn to the world grain market.
When this happens, it will almost certainly drive
grain prices upward. Remember that when the Soviets decided after a poor
harvest in 1972 to import grain rather than tighten their belts, the world
wheat price climbed from $1.90 per bushel in 1972 to $4.89 in 1974.
The two keys to stabilizing aquifers are raising water
prices and stabilizing population. The first step is to eliminate the
pervasive subsidies that create artificially low prices for water in so
many countries. The next is to raise water prices to the point where they
will reduce pumping to a sustainable level by raising water productivity
and reducing water use in all segments of society. Low-income urban
consumers can be protected with "lifeline rates" that provide for
basic needs at an affordable price. Prices of underground water can be
raised by installing meters on pumps and charging for water as Mexico
has done or by auctioning permits to operate wells. Either way, water
prices rise.
The second key is to quickly stabilize population in
water-short countries. Most of the 3 billion people projected to be added worldwide
by mid-century will be born in countries already experiencing water
shortages. Unless population growth can be slowed quickly by investing
heavily in female literacy and family planning services, there may not be a
humane solution to the emerging world water shortage.
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Selected Examples of Aquifer Depletion
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Country
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Region
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Description of Depletion
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China
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North China Plain
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Water table falling by 2–3 meters per year under much of the
Plain. As pumping costs rise, farmers are abandoning irrigation.
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United States
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Southern Great Plains
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Irrigation is heavily dependent on water from Ogallala
aquifer, largely a fossil aquifer. Irrigated area in Texas, Oklahoma, and Kansas is shrinking as
aquifer is depleted.
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Pakistan
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Punjab
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Water table is falling under the Punjab and in the
provinces of Baluchistan and North West
Frontier.
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India
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Punjab, Haryana,
Rajasthan, Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, and other states
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Water tables falling by 1–3 meters per year in some parts.
In some states extraction is double the recharge. In the Punjab, India’s breadbasket
water table falling by nearly 1 meter per year.
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Iran
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Chenaran Plain,
northeastern Iran
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Water table was falling by 2.8 meters per year but in 2001
drought and drilling of new wells to supply nearby city of Mashad dropped it by 8
meters.
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Yemen
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Entire country
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Water table falling by 2 meters per year throughout country
and 6 meters a year in Sana’a basin. Nation’s capital, Sana’a, could run
out of water by end of this decade.
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Mexico
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State of Guanajuato
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In this agricultural state, the water table is falling by
1.8–3.3 meters per year.
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Source: China from Michael Ma, “Northern Cities Sinking as
Water Table Falls,” South China Morning Post, 11 August 2001; United
States from Postel, Sandra Postel,
Pillar of Sand (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1999), and from
Bonnie Terrell and Phillip N. Johnson, “Economic Impact of the Depletion
of the Ogallala Aquifer: A Case Study of the Southern High Plains of Texas,”
presented at the American Agricultural Economics Association annual
meeting in Nashville, TN, 8–11 August 1999; Pakistan, India, and Mexico
in Tushaar Shah et al., The Global Groundwater
Situation: Overview of Opportunities and Challenges (Colombo, Sri Lanka:
International Water Management Institute, 2000); Postel,
op. cit. this note; Iran from Chenaran
Agricultural Center, Ministry of Agriculture, according to Hamid Taravati, publisher,
Iran, e-mail to author, 25 June 2002; Christoper
Ward, “Yemen’s Water Crisis,” based on a lecture to the British Yemeni
Society in September 2000, July 2001.
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Lester R. Brown:
Plan B: Rescuing a Planet under Stress
and a Civilization in Trouble
Summary by Michael McGoodwin,
prepared 2005
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Acknowledgement:
This work has been summarized using the W. W. Norton 2003 edition.
Quotations are for the most part taken from that work, as are paraphrases of
its commentary.
Impression:
This is a short, concise, but important book. The author has written many
similar works since the 1970s, and is currently head of the Earth Policy Institute which he founded.
Although the book is sometimes repetitive and seems a little patched together
from previous articles and books, it nevertheless skillfully summarizes many of
the ecological and environmental issues that threaten our earth and our
future. The outlook is consistently international and global in scope,
and not confined to any one country. The subject matter presented has
been carefully selected and honed to maximize political persuasiveness and to
minimize controversy. Compared to Al Gore's passionate, spiritual, and at
times deeply personal Earth in the Balance (1993), it is quite similar in its
subject matter, but more polished and selective in its focus. For
example, it sidesteps the failure of clergy and certain organized religions to
substantively address the problems of overpopulation, and it studiously avoids
direct criticism of the profound neglect of environmental issues by President
Bush. Everyone should read this book and try to act to bring about the
needed changes the author presents so clearly. However, individuals can
only accomplish so much--informed and forward-looking responsible national
leadership is the missing ingredient to date. Government must take the
lead and establish new policies and priorities such as are discussed
here. Even Al Gore's subsequent track record while Vice President and as
candidate for president is disappointing in this regard.
The following
presents a skeleton summary of the major topics presented in this book.
Commentary or editorialization by MCM is enclosed in
[square brackets].
The dedication
is to Orville L. Freeman, former Secretary of Agriculture. The Preface
discusses his 2001 book, Eco-Economy: Building and Economy for the Earth, but
the current book argues for more urgent action at wartime speed. He
acknowledges that to keep the book short, he has largely omitted discussion of
the loss of biological diversity and has given only passing mention to problems
of water pollution or environmental education.
A Planet Under Stress
World
population has doubled and the world economy has expanded by 7x
in the past 50 years. We have a "bubble economy" that is using
resources at an unsustainable rate and that will collapse without drastic
intervention. Major concerns are overgrazing rangeland, overpumping aquifers, draining rivers dry, overfishing the oceans, destroying habitat, increasing CO2
release leading to global warming, the first mass extinctions of species since
65 million years ago, soil erosion and expanding deserts, etc. As of
about 1980, we are consuming not just the interest earned by nature but also
the principal of our natural endowment, and this will
lead to environmental bankruptcy. We are currently (as of 1999) exceeding
nature's capacity by about 20%, perhaps 24% by 2003. Discussion
of other bubble economies such as Japan, the
NASDAQ.
World
population grew from 2.5 billion in 1950 to 6.1 billion in 2000, exceeding that
of the past 40 million years. Our global economic output rose from $7
trillion in 1950 to $46 trillion in 2000. Population growth and
increasing prosperity promotes increased consumption of grain, tripling demand
from 1950 to 2000. Producing this grain has accelerated topsoil
erosion. Water use has tripled, causing water tables to fall and wells to
dry up. Fossil fuel consumption has gone up 4x,
and CO2 emitted exceeds natural fixation capacity, leading to the rise in
atmospheric CO2 from 316 PPM in 1959 to 369 in 2000. Food such as grain
will be in increasingly short supply--in the years 2000-2002, the grain harvest
fell short of consumption (for example, in 2002 the grain harvest of 1807
million tons fell 5% short). Farmers are unlikely to be able to close
this gap without causing further environmental degradation.
Progress toward
reducing world hunger has essentially halted--the number of undernourished
people in 2000 is estimated by the UN at 840 million.
Problems
Farmers Face
Global warming
is increasingly evident, causes reduced crop yields. Photosynthesis for
many crops including corn slows to zero at 37° C. Each 1 degree Celsius
rise in temperature above the optimal crop temperature during the growing
season reduces yields by 10%. China as an
example.
Overpumping of aquifers: The water tables are falling in scores of
countries (including Northern China, the US, and India) due to widespread overpumping using powerful diesel and electric pumps.
Other countries affected include Pakistan, Iran, and Mexico. This will
eventually lead to water scarcity and cutbacks in grain harvest.
Ecological
Meltdown in Northern China
China's problems include also
overgrazing rangeland (especially problematic are sheep and goats), overcutting forests, loss of protective vegetation and
increasing dust bowls, and expanding deserts (especially the Gobi as well as in Gansu and Inner Mongolia). Millions of
tons of topsoil can be lost to winds in a single day, depositing dust on
distant countries including S. Korea, Japan, and even the US. These adverse
changes will force many millions of internal migrants and environmental
refugees, as well as other hardships.
Food as a
National Security Issue
Iran and Egypt import 40% of their
grain; Algeria, Japan, S Korea, and Taiwan import 70%; and Israel and Yemen import 90%. The
US, Canada, France, Australia, Argentina, and Thailand are net grain exporters
and together account for 90% of grain exports. Rising Chinese demand (its
current grain shortfall is 40 million tons/year) will destabilize world grain
markets eventually and lead to life-threatening rises in grain prices. Canada in 2002 stopped
exporting grain. Shortages like these have caused or will lead to
millions of environmental refugees, particularly in China, Nigeria, Iran, Yemen, Quetta (in Pakistan's Baluchistan province). Hunger
will be on the rise, may lead to social breakdown and anarchy (such as is
evident in Somalia, Afghanistan, and the Dem. Rep. of
the Congo).
Emerging Water
Shortages
The author
expands on the topics of overpumping aquifers and
rivers running dry (such as the Colorado, the Yellow River in China, Amu Darya that fed the Aral Sea,
the Nile, the Indus, and the Ganges.
Grain requires
1000x times it weight in water to be grown (whereas steel production requires
only 14x its weight in water). Water consumed indirectly for food
production can reach 4,000 liters per day. Water is being diverted to
cities and to industry as higher and less consuming uses, shorting agriculture
as a result.
Falling Water
Tables
Deep (fossil)
aquifers are composed of fossil water and are nonreplenishable--pumping
from them is akin to mining. Examples include the Ogallala under the Great Plains and the deep aquifers
under N China and Saudi Arabia. Replenishable aquifers are usually shallow and are
replenished at the rate of recharge.
The countries
most severely affected by aquifer overpumping (in
order of population) are China, India, the US, Pakistan, Mexico, Iran, S Korea,
Morocco, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Syria, Tunisia, Israel, and Jordan, comprising
together 3.2 billion people. The average deep aquifer level in N China dropped 2.9 meters just
in year 2000.
Some deep wells
near Beijing now extend to 1000
meters below the surface in order to tap fresh water and supply crops.
Chinese grain harvest (except corn) is falling: (1) from 123 million tons of
wheat in 1997 to 87 million in 2003, (2) from 140 million tons of rice in 1997
to 121 million in 2003; and (3) from 392 million tons of all grains in 1988 to
338 million in 2003. China is overpumping
the basins of the Hai, the Huai,
and the Yellow River.
India is overpumping
the Punjab, Haryana, Gujarat, and other regions, and
water shortages could eventually cause a decline in grain yields of 25%.
In Gujarat, the water table has fallen from 15 meters deep
to 400 meters.
In Texas, Oklahoma, and Kansas, leading grain states,
the water table has fallen by more than 30 meters, and many wells have gone dry
in the southern Great Plains.
Other countries
are especially affected, particularly Yemen.
Rivers Running
Dry
Rivers run dry
from damming, diversion for irrigation, and loss of springs when aquifers have
diminished that would otherwise recharge them. Examples include the Colorado in the US. The Amy Darya no longer recharges the Aral Sea, whose volume of water
has dropped by 83%.
The Yellow River in China has failed to reach the
sea in parts of each year since 1985. The Nile River's discharge into the Mediterranean has declined from 32
billion m3 to less than 2 billion m3 as a result of the Aswan Dam and other
diversions. The Indus, Mekong, Tigris, and Euphrates are also affected,
inasmuch as virtually all their water is being used.
Farmers Losing
to the Cities
Due to the
higher consumption of water and lower value of crops compared to industrial
goods, as well as high urban demands, farmers are losing out to cities and
industry...
Scarcity
Crossing National Borders
Countries
forced to import their grain are increasingly vulnerable. Water shortages
are increasingly putting countries in competition and will lead to wars.
A Food Bubble
Economy
In many
countries, food production is artificially maintained by unsustainable
depletion of natural resources such as fossil water, and collapse of these
bubble economies is inevitable. Texas, Kansas, and Nebraska get 70-90% of their
irrigation water from the fossil Ogallala aquifer, a nonrenewable resource
which is being depleted. Other countries depleting their aquifers for
food are cited.
Eroding Soils
and Shrinking Cropland
Soil Erosion:
Wind and Water
Loss of topsoil. Mayan historical
example. US dust bowl. Silting of reservoirs.
Land productivity falls with loss of soil. Ethiopia is losing 1 billion
tons/year of topsoil, India 4.7 billion. Nepal, China also affected.
Role of overplowing and tilling of marginal soils or
sloping lands.
Advancing
Deserts
Desertification
is caused by clearing of vegetation and forests which serves as natural
windbreaks, overplowing, overgrazing, firewood
gathering, loss through dust storms of soils, etc. Examples cited in Africa, Nigeria, Kenya, Iran, Afghanistan, China, Inner Mongolia, etc.
Crops and Cars
Compete for Land
Prime crop land
is being paved over for autos, since both farms and roads prefer flat
well-drained lands. One auto requires about 0.2 acres in land paved, often at
the expense of crop land. Future for China, India, and other countries
where there is not enough land to provide for the projected number of
automobiles as well as crop land needed to meet food requirements.
The
Land-Hungry Soybean
Soy oil and soy
meal are major food and livestock feed products. Soybean oil dominates world
vegetable oil economy. The US soy harvest in 2002 was
worth $13 billion, 2x that of wheat. Meeting rising soybean demand will
require more land.
Grainland Gains and Losses
World grain
areas peaked in 1981 at 732 million hectares and have declined to 647 in
2002. Declines have occurred due to abandonment of marginal soils, soil
loss, paving and population expansion, conversion to fish ponds, etc.
Spreading Land
Hunger
Family farms
are shrinking in size due to divided inheritances, and many are too small to be
profitable...
The author
concludes this chapter by quoting Walter Lowdermilk's
"Eleventh Commandment" regarding sustainable development from a 1939
Bulletin of the US Department of Agriculture:
Thou shalt inherit the Holy Earth as a faithful steward,
conserving its resources and productivity from generation to generation.
Thou shalt safeguard thy fields from soil erosion,
thy living waters from drying up,
thy forests from desolation,
and protect thy hills from overgrazing by thy herds,
that thy descendents may have abundance forever.
If any shall fail in this stewardship of the land,
thy fruitful fields shall become sterile stony ground
and wasting gullies,
and thy descendents shall decrease and live in poverty
or perish from off the face of the earth.
Rising
Temperatures and Rising Seas
Heat waves are
increasing in frequency and severity. Ice is melting, storms are
increasing.
The
Temperature Record
A graph of
average global temperature from the Goddard Institute for Space Science is
presented. The following graph dated 12
January 2005 and extending to the year 2004 is adapted from their website. It
shows the deviation from average surface temperatures globally (and in selected
locales) compared to a base period of 1951 to 1980:

(click on thumbnail)
A rise in the
21st century of between 1.4 to 5.8 °C is projected by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change:

(click on thumbnail)
Rising
temperatures decrease crop yields for rice, wheat and corn beyond a maximal
optimal temperature that varies from 34 to 37 degrees C. This is due to
plant dehydration and other heat stresses. Agriculture might be moved to
cooler northern regions, but these tend to have poor soils. Snow and ice
reservoirs of water are being depleted by global warming. There is
increased winter runoff of water, when it is not needed and causes flooding,
and diminished runoff of ice melt in the spring and summer when it is
needed. The rising of the seas from melting of glacial ice, Greenland and
Antarctic ice caps, Arctic sea ice, and other ice melting threatens many
coastal areas in the world, due to a projected rise of somewhere between 4-35
inches. These include many low islands, Bangladesh, rice growing areas of
India, Thailand, Indonesia, and other Asian countires,
lower Manhattan, Washington D.C., New Orleans, etc. Destructive storms
are increasing in frequency and severity, causing wind damage, flooding,
mudslides, and other forms of widespread destruction. The economic costs
of storms are increasing and threaten the viability of the reinsurance
industry. The costs of global warming are being subsidized by subsidies
for fossil fuel consumption, stimulated by powerful gas and oil lobbies.
Our Socially
Divided World
1.2 billion people are undernourished according to the World Health
Organization. Life Expectancy is decreasing dramatically in sub-Saharan Africa due to the HIV
epidemic, which is having devastating effects on adult workers and their
children, etc. This epidemic, along with endemic tuberculosis and
malaria, should not be simply watched with "a kind of pathological
equanimity". Poverty and hunger are greatest in India and Africa. They contribute
to low birth weight infants, greater disease, reduced productivity. There
is a great need for potable water, improved hygiene. Illiteracy affects
875 million adults, 60% of them women, and contributes to poverty.
Plan A:
Business as Usual
Proceeding as we are doing without radical redirection constitutes
Plan A, no change at all, and will lead to eventual bursting of the
environmental bubble and severe consequences. The rate of
environmental degradation is accelerating. Species are going extinct at
an alarming rate. Pollution and toxic wastes are rapidly
increasing. Population growth in excess of resources leads to
conflicts, contributing to the genocide in Rwanda, as well as tensions in
Nigeria, India, etc. Water
competition among countries is increasing: Egypt, Sudan, and Ethiopia; Turkey, Syria, and Iraq; the 5 Stans sharing the Aral Sea basin, etc.
(Plan B)
Raising Water Productivity
Needed
solutions include the following: Adopt realistic prices for water, use a
sliding scale that starts at a low base rate.
Meter the use of ground and river water. Provide economic incentives for
more efficient water use. Place control of water in the hands of local
associations. Raise water productivity (kg grain per ton of water used)
with appropriate selection of crops (e.g., wheat rather than rice, sorghum
rather than corn), reduce seepage, employ drip irrigation, laser leveling of
land, etc. Harvest rain water, terrace hill sides to reduce runoff and
increase rain absorption for recharging aquifers. Reduce nonfarm uses of water to wash away wastes including toxic
pollutants. Diminish sewage by using composting toilets. Recycle
sewage water to potable water [but can drug contaminants be fully
removed?] High cost of desalination plants ($1 - $2 per cubic meter to
desalt sea water).
(Plan B)
Raising Land Productivity
Applying more
fertilizer will not generally be the solution. Crop yields are not
generally rising as much as in the past. Increasing yields can be done by
planting leguminous trees, employing multiple cropping (e.g., raising winter
wheat and summer corn, or wheat plus rice, or wheat plus soybeans). Also
need to produce animal protein more efficiently. Cattle in feedlots
require 7 kg of grain to produce 1 kg gain in live weight, whereas pigs require
4 kg, poultry require only 2 kg, and herbivorous farmed fish (such as tilapia,
catfish, and carp) require less than 2 kg. Aquaculture has considerable
potential due to the high efficiency of converting feed into protein. China is the leading producer
of farmed fish. Although public controversy exists about farming
carnivorous salmon and shrimp, world aquaculture is dominated by herbivorous
species and shellfish, and this is where the potential for growth lies.
Use of crop
residues for animal (cattle, water buffalo) feed is increasing especially in India, which has eclipsed the
US in milk production as a
result. Ammoniation of these residues can
facilitate ruminant digestion.
Wind erosion
can be countered by planting tree shelterbelts, by strip cropping, and by
paying farmers to plant trees.
Water erosion
can be reduced by terracing, conservation tillage (no tillage or minimal
tillage), permanent vegetative covers, curbs on urban sprawl and the dominance
of the automobile.
People should
eat down the food chain, somewhere in the middle like the Italians, for whom
meat is more a condiment than a main dish.
Sheep and goats
destroy grass and vegetation, so a shift to dairy cattle is recommended.
Reduce overgrazing. Shift from fuel wood to solar cookers or
wind-generated electricity.
Ban clearcutting.
(Plan B)
Cutting Carbon Emissions in Half
Tony Blair of Britain has joined Sweden's PM in urging reducing
CO2 emissions by 60% by 2050, much greater than the 5% by 2012 called for by
the Kyoto Protocol. Canada is phasing out
coal-fired power plants which lead to acid rain and mercury pollution. Germany has set the pace in
reducing CO2 emissions by 40% by 2020. The US so far is lagging, due
to a lack of leadership. It would be entirely feasible to cut in half CO2
emissions by 2015.
Improving
energy efficiency is a needed goal. Methods include: improved household
appliance energy efficiency, improved building and home energy efficiency, banning
nonrefillable beverage containers (aluminum is more
expensive than refillable glass), switching to compact fluorescent lighting,
doubling the fuel efficiency of autos (hybrid engines), redesigning urban
transport for greater efficiency (e.g., light rail, congestion tax), wind
farm generation of electricity (cost in 2001 was as low as 4 cents per
kWh), conversion to hydrogen fuel cell power for building and autos, shifting
subsidies from petroleum consumption to use of wind and hydrogen power, etc., photovoltaic
cell conversion of sun to electricity, and geothermal energy for heating and
power generation.
The hydrogen economy. Problems of storage of
hydrogen especially in autos. Who will provide the hydrogen?
Cutting carbon
emission with public transport and reduction of autos also can be fostered by
restructuring incentives and subsidies.
Two-way or net
metering can help individuals operate wind power generators that feed
electricity back into the grid. This can help to reduce coal power
generation with resultant CO2 emission and mercury pollution.
(Plan B)
Responding to the Social Challenge
Must slow population growth, so that medium projection of 8.9
billion by 2050 does not come true. Need effective and universal birth
control, reproductive health, and family planning. US President must
advocate a policy of 2 children per couple.
Must have universal basic education, especially of poor girls,
more teacher training.
Must combat
AIDS epidemic, close the condom gap, address high risk
groups such as sex workers and IV drug abusers. [Can anti-retroviral
drugs be more widely distributed?]
Must promote basic health initiatives, especially for infectious
diseases in third world countries, assisted by reducing hunger (which
predisposes to health problems and disease vulnerability). Provide better
water supplies, reduce auto accidents, discourage smoking, provide school
lunches in poor countries, develop women, infants, and
children (WIC) programs. Some of these efforts will help to reduce the
conditions that breed terrorism.
Governments
implementing some of these programs can experience productivity rises and other
social benefits instead of worsening "demographic fatigue".
The total cost
to implement a global set of basic social goals is $62 billion per year [less
than the cost to date of the Iraq war], and includes $15 billion for universal
primary education, $4 billion for adult literacy, $10 billion for family
planning, $2 billion for closing the condom gap, $6 billion for school lunches,
$4 billion for WIC assistance in the 44 poorest countries, and $21 billion for
universal basic health care. The US would contribute
perhaps $20 billion, and other countries would provide the rest.
(Plan B)
Rising to the Challenge
A massive
mobilization is needed at wartime speed, just as the US did after Pearl Harbor. Restructure the
tax system to reduce destructive activities and promote more environmentally
sound initiatives. Slow world population growth to stabilize at 7.5
billion people. Shift to a hydrogen based economy. Stabilize water
tables, reduce soil erosion. By 1942, the US made the greatest
expansion of industrial output in the nation's history, complete with auto and
gasoline rationing. Our markets must include in prices the indirect costs
of providing goods and services deriving from consuming nonrenewable
resources. Set cigarette and gasoline prices to reflect the real costs to
society including future health problems. Gasoline should be $3-8/gallon.
Plant more trees. Tax carbon burning, tax emissions of heavy metals, tax
garbage production, tax auto congestion in urban
cores, tax CFCs and energy consumption. Shift subsidies to more desirable
goals than petroleum use.
These goals are
doable, we must adopt Plan B or suffer the
consequences of our inaction.