Title: Speculations on the Future of Water and Food Security
1Speculations on the Future of Water and Food
Security
- Ismail Serageldin
- IFPRI
- 29 March 2004
2Outline
- How Scarce Is Water?
- How Much for Agriculture?
- Climate Change And Its Impact
- Problems, Approaches and Reforms
- The Role Of Science
- Rebuilding Social Structures Empowerment Is Key
- Envoi
3IFPRIs Excellent Work
- 2020 exercise
- M. Rosegrant, X. Cai and S. Cline, World Water
and Food to 2025 Dealing with Scarcity, 2002 - IWMIs work
- World Vision exercise, 2000.
- Tokyo Club debates 2002-2004
- Others
4How Scarce Is Water?
5Fresh water is precious
6Fresh Water Is Only 2.5 of All Water
Only 2.5 is fresh water
97.5 is salt water
7Two thirds of that is locked in Glaciers and Ice
Caps
82/3 of the remaining part is lost to
Evapotranspiration
9That leaves only 40,700 KM3 Potentially Available
to people
10Of that 20 are too remote
11Of the accessible part 3/4 come as floods and are
not readily useable
12With dams, etc. Total water available to humans
sustainably is about 12,500 km3
Of the 80 or 32,900 km3 accessible
1/4 available sustainably
3/4 floods
8,200
Dams, etc.
4,300
12,500 km3
13Total water available sustainably 12,500 km3
14Total water available sustainably 12,500 km3
- About 35 directly used by people
- About 19 used instream (to dilute pollution,
sustain fisheries, maintain wetlands, etc) - Therefore, more than 50 or 6,250 km3 is
currently used
15Per Capita Availability Shows Huge Variation
Country/region
Water availability
gt 10,000 m3/year
North America
Egypt
1,100
Jordan
260
Syrias water table has been declining one meter
every year for the past 30 years!
16Regional per capita availability of water is
declining
000 m3
16
Africa
14
12
10
World
8
Asia
6
4
2
MENA
0
1960
1990
2025
17Current Mismanagement
18Fragmentation by Use
- In each country at least 6, and sometimes as much
as twenty, agencies are involved with water
management
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24International fragmentation
- About 260 river basins are shared by two or more
countries, highlighting the need for
collaboration in water management
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26Water Use And The Environment
27Rising Water Use
- In The 20th Century,
- Population Grew Three-fold,
- But
- Water Use Grew Six-fold!
28Human Activity Has Had an Impact on Both the
Hydrological Cycle and the Quality of Water
29Three Gorges Construction
30Storage Capacity in cu.m. / person
- USA 7000
- Australia 5000
- So. Africa 700
- Ethiopia 25
- Kenya 4
31The Yellow river did not reach the sea 220 days
in 1997!
32In the last 100 years 50 of the worlds wetlands
have been lost to development.
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34Water Budgets
- Global
- 97 Salt Water
- 3 Fresh Water
- Freshwater
- 87 Not Accessible
- 13 Accessible
- MENA
- 1 of Accessible Freshwater
- 5 of World Population
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37How Much for Agriculture?
38INDUSTRY
RESERVOIR LOSSES
MUNICIPAL
AGRICULTURE
395
INDUSTRY
6
MUNICIPAL
89
AGRICULTURE
Source World Bank WDI 2002
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41(Liters/day)
Domestic
Food Production
42One Calorie One Liter
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44Underground water is being mined at unsustainable
rates and 10 of world grain production depends
on unsustainable aquifer withdrawals.
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50Irrigated Agriculture in Developing Countries
- Today accounts for
- 40 of all crop production
- 60 of cereals
- Over the next 30 years, to meet the demands of a
larger world population, we must increase - arable irrigated land by 22, and
- water withdrawals by 14
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52Water Use Efficiency
53Water Use Efficiency in Agriculture is Low
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55Many Transfers
- From main Source to Irrigation System (T-1)
- From Irrigation to local canal (T-2)
- From Local canal to field (T-3)
- From Field to plant (T-4)
- Plant uptake (T-5)
56Water Use Efficiency (T-1) x (T-2) x (T-3) x
(T-4) x (T-5)
57Water Use Efficiency 0.8 x 0.8 x 0.8 x 0.8 x
0.8 0.33
58Water Use Efficiency 0.9 x 0.9 x 0.9 x 0.9 x
0.9 0.59
59Quality and Quantity of WaterPollution Reduces
Available/useable water
60Pollution!
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62Freshwater Fish Are Going Extinct at Five Times
the Rate of Marine Fish Species
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64Changing the Way We Manage Water
65Workable Approaches
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67More Crop Per Drop!
68Crop yield per unit of waterwheat kg/cu.m
2.2
0.8
0.3
RAINFED
IRRIGATED
SUPPLEMENTAL IRRIGATION
Source ICARDA
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70Increasing Water Use Efficiency
- Reuse of drainage water from irrigated fields (as
in Egypt) - Better management of the System (less losses)
- More efficient delivery techniques
- More appropriate cropping patterns
- Precision farming on water use
71Water is re-used multiple times
72Increasing Water Use Efficiency
- Reuse of drainage water from irrigated fields (as
in Egypt) - Better management of the System (less losses)
- More efficient delivery techniques
- More appropriate cropping patterns
- Precision farming on water use
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75Increasing Water Use Efficiency
- Reuse of drainage water from irrigated fields (as
in Egypt) - Better management of the System (less losses)
- More efficient delivery techniques
- More appropriate cropping patterns
- Precision farming on water use
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79Increasing Water Use Efficiency
- Reuse of drainage water from irrigated fields (as
in Egypt) - Better management of the System (less losses)
- More efficient delivery techniques
- More appropriate cropping patterns
- Precision farming on water use
80Selecting The Most Appropriate Cropping Patterns
81Increasing Water Use Efficiency
- Reuse of drainage water from irrigated fields (as
in Egypt) - Better management of the System (less losses)
- More efficient delivery techniques
- More appropriate cropping patterns
- Precision farming on water use
82Precision Farming
83Increasing Water Use Efficiency
- Reuse of drainage water from irrigated fields (as
in Egypt) - Better management of the System (less losses)
- More efficient delivery techniques
- More appropriate cropping patterns
- Precision farming on water use
84Reforms
85Reforms
- IWRM
- More efficient use of water
- Promoting P4
- New water (Alternative sources)
- Regional and international cooperation
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88Reforms
- IWRM
- More efficient use of water
- Promoting P4
- New water (Alternative sources)
- Regional and international cooperation
89Reforms
- IWRM
- More efficient use of water
- Promoting P4
- New water (Alternative sources)
- Regional and international cooperation
90P4 People Public Private Partnerships
- Putting people first
- Mobilizes stakeholders and involves them in the
design and implementation of the PPP - Recognizes community action
91Reforms
- IWRM
- More efficient use of water
- Promoting P4
- New water (Alternative sources)
- Regional and international cooperation
92New Water Sources(US cents /cu.m)
- Reduce demand 10 - 70
- leakage repair 10 - 70
- Desalination 20 - 40
- (brackish water)
- Wastewater reuse 10 50
- (Only for irrig. some industry)
- Desalination 50 90
- (sea water)
-
Source World Bank est. 2003 in WB,from scarcity
through reform to Security, for WWF3, Kyoto Japan
2003, p.13
93Using Treated Wastewater
Sorghum and Topinambur irrigated with Treated
Wastewater in Sorbulak area, Kazakhstan
Courtesy ICARDA
94Reforms
- IWRM
- More efficient use of water
- Promoting P4
- New water (Alternative sources)
- Regional and international cooperation
95Reforms
- IWRM
- More efficient use of water
- Promoting P4
- New water (Alternative sources)
- Regional and international cooperation
96Essential Questions
- Always askÂ
- Who pays?
- Who benefits?
- Â
- Always trace the shifting and incidence of
taxation and subsidies
97Climate Change And Its Impact
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99Ozone Hole, 1998 image
100Hottest Year on Record?
101Hottest Year on Record?
102La Nina in the Pacific
103Hurricane Bonnie
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105Extreme Variability Africas Burden
Kenya Annual Rainfall Variation about the Average
160
140
120
100
80
60
1956
1958
1960
1962
1964
1966
1968
1970
1972
1974
1976
1978
1980
106Climate Variability (Change?)Index of Rainfall
in Sahel 1941-1990
Source Departure from standard deviation
Climate Prediction Center 1991, Prrsentation by
South Africa at Camdessus Panel meetings
107Climate Variability (Change?)Index of Rainfall
in Sahel 1941-1990
Source Departure from standard deviation
Climate Prediction Center 1991, Prrsentation by
South Africa at Camdessus Panel meetings
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111Vulnerability Of The Poor
- The Ability To Accumulate Capital Is Reduced
(Selling Off Assets In A Downturn) - Â
- Overall Economic Growth Is Reduced (Less Poverty
Reduction) - Â
- Rebuilding Social Structures empowerment Is Key
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118Food Production and Global Environmental Issues
Land degradation
Climate change
Food supply and demand
Biodiversity loss
Unsustainable forestry
Source The World Bank and the Global
Environment, A progress report, adapted from
Watson, et. al. 1998.
119In General
- Climate change will increase variability of
weather phenomena - Generally mean declining rain-fall over the
long-term - Increase vulnerability of poor farmers in the
arid and semi-arid zones
120Questions on Dams
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130The Role Of Science
131Science Can Help
- Agriculture
- Water purification and waste management
- Environmental management (new Industries)
132Science Can Help
- Agriculture
- Water purification and waste management
- Environmental management (new Industries)
133Traditional Wisdom and Modern Science
134The Genetic Imperative
135Harnessing the Genetics Revolution
- Going beyond marker-assisted selection, tissue
culture and genetic maps - Recognizing the new revolution in genomics, and
QTL analysis - Selecting for valuable genes, and not only on
phenotype
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137Major Effort at Developing Better Suited Plants
- Drought tolerance
- General resistance to stresses
- Salt water plants? Halophytes, Mangroves, etc.
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142Why Not Super Upland Rice by 2020?
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147Science Can Help
- Agriculture
- Water purification and waste management
- Environmental management (new Industries)
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149The Biotechnology RevolutionPromise and Peril
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153Science Can Help
- Agriculture
- Water purification and waste management
- Environmental management (new Industries)
154Oil Dispersing ChemicalsTokyo Bay, July 1997
155Opens Amazing New Possibilities
156Here industrial biotechnology can be very helpful
157Benefits of Industrial Biotechnology
- Compared to traditional industrial processes it
is more efficient, renewable and cleaner
(improvements include from 3 to 10 times
reduction in waste)
158New paradigm of research in industrial
biotechnology
- Gene shuffling and biochip screening
- Enormous new power
- Faster, cheaper better designed products
159Gene Shuffling As a Research Strategy
- Basically it uses the way nature works, and
accelerates it - We can do in one week what natural processes
would do in one million years - Where nature screens by the local environment, we
screen by desirable traits - The systems power is when we combine the
laboratory shuffling with the huge diversity
available in nature
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161Biochips
162Testing with biochips
163Biochips
- Useful to find out which genes are turned on when
we look for high producing strains - Biochips can now assay tens of thousands of
reactions at single go - Move to wafers of biochips, now in development,
could lift that number up to 60 million probes!
164IPR and Lawsuits
165New paradigm is affecting all aspects of industry
- The preparation of industrial enzymes a-la-carte
- The acceleration of drug design and testing
- And so much more
166The power of the new technologies
- Old paradigm of site directed mutagenesis you
could develop 3-6 new protein molecules per month - Now we can produce 100,000 different protein
molecules per day - To analyze this huge diversity we screen them
through biochips, and select for the desirable
traits
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168The key and the effect of the new technologies
- The breakthroughs are robotic screening and small
(chip) size. The two tools work in concert. - We now are convinced that we can make any
industrial enzyme needed at an industrial scale.
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170Exciting applications
- Industrial enzymes are an environmentally
friendly Clean Technology because they are
biodegradable, a renewable resource, energy
efficient, recycle and reduce waste and replace
harsh chemicals - Industrial enzymes have demonstrable benefits in
detergents, textiles, baking, animal feed and
biofuel
171Examples of dramatic changes (due to new
enzymatically based processes)
- Textile treatments 10 times savings in use of
caustic soda and 2.5 times in water - Â
- Antibiotic production over five times savings in
solvents, environmentally problematic chemicals,
steam, CO2 emissions and waste water.
172And This Is Just the Beginning
173Also The Science of Remote Sensing!
174Remote Sensing As a Tool
175From Global to Local
- Remote sensing and fast computers make it
possible to link global data bases to local
realities - Enormous increases in precision NRM
176Desertification
In one year (1984-1985), Saharas boundary
shifted 110 km decreasing an area 724,000 sq. km
(21.3 times the Netherlands)
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178Challenges Human Activity and Ecosystem Linkages
- Spatial
- Location-specific
179Remote Sensing Makes Detailed Ecological Analysis
Possible
180Urbanization Can Also Be Tracked
181Remote Sensing and Water
- Classical approaches
- Large variations
- Depend on quality data (e.g. stream flow)
- Systemic measurements at regular intervals
difficult - Remote sensing
- Strategic, precise information
- Water availability at basin level
- Better understanding of systems at low cost
182Irrigation in the Desert
183Evaluating water resources
- Combining satellite estimates with ground-based
rainfall data - Allows volumetric estimates of water outflow
- Vital for planning water at the basin level
(Total kg/m3, June to November, 1999)
184Measuring total evaporation_at_ 1 km resolution,
Jun-Nov 99
- Map answers the question where is water being
consumed? - Helps water resource planners allocate water and
manage its distribution - Information that can be used by poor farmers
(Total mm, June to November, 1999)
185Precision Farming
186Technology Upgrades
187Understanding and Predicting the Weather
188Envoi
189We Need a Collaborative Approach Among Science
Organizations for a Systematic Attention to Water
and Development Issues
190International Agencies (UNU, CGIAR Especially
ICARDA) and Regional Institutions Must Work
Together to Harness Science for Water and
Development Issues
191Innovate! Unleash the Creativity of the
Various Actors!
192It Can Be Done!
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197Towards Better Tomorrows
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