Asia-Pacific nations face water security threat - Study
MANILA, Philippines: More than 75 percent of the countries in Asia
and the Pacific are experiencing a serious lack of water security, with
many of them facing an imminent water crisis unless immediate steps are
taken to improve management of water resources, says a new study
prepared jointly by the Asian Development Bank (ADB) and Asia-Pacific
Water Forum (APWF).
“While the Asia-Pacific region has become an economic powerhouse, it
is alarming that no developing country in the region can be considered
‘water-secure’,” said ADB's Vice President for Knowledge Management and
Sustainable Development, Bindu Lohani. “Countries must urgently improve
water governance through inspired leadership and creative policymaking,”
he said.
Asian Water Development Outlook 2013 provides the first quantitative
and comprehensive analysis of water security on a country by country
basis in the region.
It examines all dimensions of water security from the household level
to water-related disasters, and uses indicators and a scaling system to
rank the progress of each of the 49 countries under assessment.
The study found that 37 developing countries in the region are either
suffering from low levels of water security or have barely begun to
engage in the essential task of improving water security.
Twelve countries are shown to have set up the infrastructure and
management systems for water security, while no country in the region
was found to have reached the highest model level of water security.
South Asia and parts of Central and West Asia are faring the worst,
with rivers under immense strain, while many Pacific islands suffer from
a lack of access to safe piped-water and decent sanitation and are
highly vulnerable to increasingly severe natural disasters.
By contrast East Asia, which has the highest frequency of hazards in
the region, is relatively better off due to higher levels of investment
in disaster defences, but urban water security remains poor in many
cities and towns.
The study highlights two stark realities, sharply rising inequality
in access to water and sanitation, and the increasingly precarious state
of rivers. It presents options for measures that can be adopted to
improve water security to mitigate the growing pressure from booming
population, urbanisation, pollution, over-extraction of groundwater,
climate change and other factors.
“Water supports health and livelihoods, grows our food, powers our
industry, and cools our generating plants, and these different uses can
no longer be seen in isolation from each other,” said Vice-Chair of the
APWF Governing Council, Ravi Narayanan.
“Unless these competing needs are balanced, water security will
remain elusive, undermining development gains and the quality of life
for billions of people in the region, especially the poor,” he said.
Current levels of investment, coupled with outdated policies and
institutions, have failed to deliver water security. The study
highlights the importance of more productive use of water, including
greater recycling of ‘used water'.
Corporatising water utilities to improve their efficiency; increasing
sanitation investment, encouraging more productive water use by food and
energy producers, imposing more regulations on groundwater use,
upgrading irrigation services, strengthening management of river basins,
mobilising more private sector investment to clean up rivers, and
improving disaster risk management, are all essential for a more secure
water future.
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