The Herald E-Edition

World’s water being drained by ‘vampiric overconsumption’

● UN urges governments to better manage humanity’s lifeblood

The UN used its first conference on water security in almost half a century that ends today to exhort governments to better manage one of humanity’s shared resources.

A quarter of the world’s population relies on unsafe drinking water while half lacks basic sanitation, the UN said on World Water Day on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, nearly threequarters of recent disasters have been related to water.

“We are draining humanity’s lifeblood through vampiric overconsumption and unsustainable use, and evaporating it through global heating,” UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres said.

Ensuring access to clean drinking water and sanitation is part of the 17-point to-do list the UN has set for sustainable development, alongside ending hunger and poverty, achieving gender equality, and taking action on climate change.

The three-day conference that began in New York on Wednesday is not intended to produce the kind of binding accord that emerged from climate meetings in Paris in 2015, or a framework like the one set for nature protection in Montreal last year.

Instead, the aim is for a “Water Action Agenda” that will contain voluntary commitments and create “political momentum”.

The US said it would invest $49bn (R890bn) in water and sanitation at home and abroad.

US ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield said this money would “help create jobs, prevent conflicts, safeguard public health, reduce the risk of famine and hunger, and enable us to respond to climate change and natural disasters”.

She gave no timeline for the investments or details on how much money would be spent where.

Hundreds of action plans were sent to the UN before the conference started, but the World Resources Institute research group said that while some commitments offered inspiration, more of them missed the mark, variously lacking funding or performance targets, or neglecting to address climate change.

WRI singled out two projects for praise — one to spend $21.2m (R390m) through 2029 on “climate-smart” agriculture and wetland restoration in the desertifying Niger River basin, and another from 1,729 companies that calculate they can make water-related investments worth $436bn (R7.9-trillion).

Scientists, economists and policy experts grouped together by the government of the Netherlands in the Global Commission on the Economics of Water recommended phasing out some $700bn (R12.7trillion) in agricultural and water subsidies, and facilitating partnerships between development finance institutions and private investors to improve water systems. —

World

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2023-03-24T07:00:00.0000000Z

2023-03-24T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://herald.pressreader.com/article/281762748504123

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