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Water

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Water makes up 60 to 70 per cent (by weight) of all living organisms and is ... Icecaps and glaciers hold 74 per cent of the world's freshwater. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Water


1
Water
2
Water Background Paper
3
Fresh Water Background Information 1
  • FRESHWATER IS A SCARCE RESOURCE
  • Water makes up 60 to 70 per cent (by weight) of
    all living organisms and is essential for
    photosynthesis.
  • The total amount of water on Earth barely changes
    from year to year. The hydrological cycle of
    evaporation and precipitation circulates the
    Earths water between the oceans, land and the
    atmosphere.
  • Water covers 75 per cent of the Earths surface
    97.5 per cent of that is salt water, only 2.5 per
    cent is freshwater.
  • Icecaps and glaciers hold 74 per cent of the
    worlds freshwater. Almost all the rest is deep
    underground, or locked in soils as moisture or
    permafrost. Only 0.3 per cent of the worlds
    freshwater is found in rivers or lakes.

4
Fresh Water Background Information 2
  • FRESHWATER IS A SCARCE RESOURCE
  • Less than one per cent of the worlds surface
    or below-ground freshwater is accessible for
    human use.
  • Within 25 years, half the worlds population
    could have trouble finding enough freshwater for
    drinking and irrigation.
  • Currently, over 80 countries, representing 40
    per cent of the worlds people, are subject to
    serious water shortages. Conditions may get worse
    in the next 50 years as populations grow and as
    global warming disrupts rainfall patterns.
  • A third of the world lives in water stressed
    areas where consumption outstrips supply. West
    Asia faces the greatest threat, where over 90 per
    cent of the population experiences severe water
    stress, with water consumption exceeding 10 per
    cent of renewable freshwater resources.

5
Fresh Water Background Information 3
  • FRESHWATER IS ESSENTIAL FOR HEALTH
  • Improved water management has brought enormous
    benefits to people in developing countries. In
    the past 20 years, over 2.4 billion people have
    gained access to safe water supplies and 600
    million to improved sanitation.
  • Still, one in six people still have no regular
    access to safe drinking water.
  • More than twice that number (2.4 billion people)
    lack access to adequate sanitation facilities.
  • People with no access to adequate sanitation are
    the poorest and most vulnerable. The problem is
    worse in remote rural and expanding urban areas.
  • In Africa, 300 million people - 40 per cent of
    the population - lack basic sanitation and
    hygiene, an increase of 70 million since 1990.
  • As much as 90 per cent of waste water in
    developing countries is discharged without
    treatment into rivers and streams.

6
Fresh Water Background Information 4
  • FRESHWATER IS ESSENTIAL FOR HEALTH
  • Unsanitary water, a breeding ground for
    parasites, amoebas and bacteria, damages the
    health of 1.2 billion people a year. Water-borne
    diseases cause 80 per cent of illnesses and
    deaths in the developing world. A child dies
    every eight seconds. Half the worlds hospital
    beds are occupied by people suffering from
    water-borne diseases.
  • Almost 40 per cent of the worlds population
    lives within 60 kilometres of the coast. Disease
    and death related to polluted coastal waters
    alone costs the global economy US16 billion a
    year.

7
Fresh Water Background Information 4
  • FRESHWATER IS ESSENTIAL FOR HEALTH
  • In southern Asia, between 1990 and 2000, 220
    million people benefited from improved access to
    freshwater and sanitation. In the same period,
    the population grew by 222 million, wiping out
    the gains that had been made. During the same
    period, in East Africa, the number of people
    without sanitation doubled to 19 million.
  • The cost of providing safe drinking water and
    proper sanitation to everyone in the world by
    2025 will be US180 billion a year, two to three
    times greater than present investments.

8
Fresh Water Background Information 5
  • FRESHWATER IS A SHARED RESOURCE
  • Rivers form a hydrological mosaic on the
    political map of the world.
  • There are an estimated 263 international river
    basins, which cover 45.3 per cent of the Earths
    land surface area (excluding Antarctica) and are
    home to more than half the planets human
    population.
  • One third of these 263 trans-boundary basins are
    shared by more than two countries.

9
Fresh Water Background Information 6
  • FRESHWATER IS A SHARED RESOURCE
  • Watershed boundaries rarely coincide with
    administrative boundaries. Many countries also
    share groundwater aquifers.
  • Groundwater aquifers store as much as 98 per
    cent of accessible freshwater supplies. They
    provide 50 per cent of global drinking water,
  • 40 per cent of industrial demands and 20 per cent
    of water for agriculture.
  • Individuals in developed countries us 10 times
    more water for daily domestic use than
    individuals in developing countries. In the UK
    the people use an average of 135 litres of water
    each day. In the developing world the average per
    person is 10 litres.

10
Fresh Water Background Information 7
  • FRESHWATER IS ESSENTIAL FOR FOOD SECURITY
  • Most of our freshwater is used to grow food.
  • While the daily drinking water needs of every
    person is approximately four liters, between
    2,000 and 5,000 liters of water are needed to
    produce an individuals daily food requirements.
  • Agriculture accounts for over 80 per cent of
    world water consumption.

11
Fresh Water Background Information 8
FRESHWATER IS ESSENTIAL FOR FOOD SECURITY
  • It is estimated that by 2030, to feed the
    worlds growing population, 14-17 more water
    will be needed for irrigation.
  • Sixty per cent of water used for irrigation is
    wasted.
  • A 10 per cent improvement in irrigation
    efficiency could double the drinking water supply
    for the poor.
  • In Africa, more than 20 per cent of peoples
    protein comes from freshwater fisheries.

12
Fresh Water Background Information 9
  • WATER IN THE FUTURE
  • Two hundred scientists in 50 countries identify
    water shortage as one of the two most worrying
    problems for the new millennium (the other was
    climate change).
  • Since 1950, global water use has more than
    tripled.
  • On current trends, over the next 20 years humans
    will use 40 per cent more water than they do now.

13
Fresh Water Background Information 10
  • WATER IN THE FUTURE
  • The number of people living in water-stressed
    countries is projected to climb from the current
    470 million to three billion by 2025. Most of
    those people live in the developing world.
  • To achieve the 2015 targets for providing
    freshwater, water supplies will have to reach an
    additional 1.5 billion people in Africa, Asia,
    Latin America and the Caribbean.
  • Nearly 200 million people in Africa are facing
    serious water shortages. By 2025, nearly 230
    million Africans will face water scarcity, and
    460 million will be living in water-stressed
    countries.

14
Fresh Water Background Information 11
  • WATER IN THE FUTURE (cont.)
  • Water problems are more related to mismanagement
    than scarcity.
  • Up to 50 per cent of urban water and 60 per cent
    of water used in agriculture is wasted through
    leaks and evaporation.
  • Logging and land conversion to meet human demand
    have shrunk the worlds forests by half, leading
    to more soil erosion and water scarcity.

15
Fresh Water Background Information 12
  • WATER IN THE FUTURE
  • Between 300 and 400 million people worldwide
    live close to and depend on wetlands.
  • Wetlands act as highly efficient sewage
    treatment works, absorbing chemicals and
    filtering pollutants and sediments. Urban and
    industrial development has claimed half the
    worlds wetlands.
  • Sustainable development and poverty
    alleviation will only be achieved through better
    management of and investment in rivers and
    wetlands and the lands that drain into them.
  • Was any of this information new to you?
  • Do you think that there is a political aspect to
    information?
  • Are any of these water factors critical where you
    live? What are people doing?
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