Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Oxfam and WWF apologise for Saudi nameplate toilet prank


NGOs apologise for smashing Saudi nameplate and stuffing it down toilet in protest over 'blocking tactics' at Bonn climate talks
John Vidal

Oxfam and WWF International, two of the world's largest and most conservative western climate change campaigning groups, have been forced to apologise profusely after an investigation found them guilty of what amounted to diplomatic terrorism: smashing Saudi Arabia's official UN nameplate and stuffing the pieces down a lavatory.

The incident, which took place in June at the last global climate talks in Bonn, followed mounting anger by NGOs at what they interpreted as continual blocking tactics by oil giant Saudi Arabia in the global talks.

On the last day of the negotiations, two activists from WWF and one from Oxfam stole the Saudi nameplate, which sits on delegates' desks to identify their origin, broke it and then took photographs of the pieces in the bowls of both the men and women's toilets of the Maritim hotel, where the talks were taking place. They then distributed photocopies with the headline: "Feeling a bit blocked?"

But what might have been dismissed as a childish end-of-term prank by passionate, over-enthusiastic campaigners became an international incident after Saudi Arabia demanded a full UN investigation and took full diplomatic advantage of the incident.

The two NGOs owned up and offered to apologise publicly, but Saudi Arabia then demanded that both organisations be banned from attending any UN climate talks for five years, a punishment which would have impacted heavily on both organisations' work. All three employees have reportedly now left the NGOs.

This week all negotiations on climate change were suspended for several hours as diplomats lined up to condemn the activists or to defend free speech.

"The severity of that heinous incident dictates that a position must be taken lest similar incidents occur in the future. Acts of intolerance from a sector that we always held in high esteem – namely civil society and NGOs – only further the objectives of fanatics," said a spokesman for Yemen.

Jonathan Pershing, lead negotiator for the US, said the action was "totally unacceptable", but stood up for free speech. "NGOs are valuable participants in the negotiations. They keep the public informed in what we are doing. We cannot undermine civil society's role in our discussions or have this incident cow or limit their voices."

The NGOs were contrite, both sending senior representatives to apologise. "The act itself was repugnant. We condemn it utterly. We failed to respond in a serious and timely manner," said Oxfam.

"I am very, very sorry. We deeply regret the offence we have caused. These actions by a WWF employee went against the repectful and democratic principles and values of our organisation. We'll ensure something like this never happens again," said president of WWF International, Yolanda Kakabadse.

The verdict, handed down by Christiana Figueres, the new executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, was itself diplomatic. One WWF member was banned from the talks for life, and two others, one from each group, were banned for the rest of the year. In addition, WWF will only be allowed to send two people to the next round of negotiations in China in October, and Oxfam will be permitted three.

Saudi Arabia, which has been accused of slowing the talks for years, released a statement apparently drawing a line under the affair: "Listening to the very clear apologies, we are a forgiving society, and we think we would like to say we are not going to seek any further action against the two organisations. We would like to consider the case closed."

Saturday, July 31, 2010

Website Helps Consumers Make Better Choices

This website is pretty cool. I saw a coworker using it. It has articles that help us make better choices, such as, which vegetables and fruits to buy organic, and which ones you don't need to!

Monday, July 19, 2010

Virtual Human is a Reality

13 July 2010 Last updated at 15:14 ET


Milo made his world debut in 2009 at the E3 Expo in Los Angeles

Microsoft has shown off its "virtual human" that reacts to a person's emotions, body movements and voice.
Milo, as he is known, is designed for use with the firm's hands-free Xbox 360 motion controller called Kinect.
The technology is the brainchild of veteran UK games designer Peter Molyneux.
"I want to introduce a new revolution in storytelling," he told the TED (Technology, Entertainment and Design) Global conference in Oxford.
"Films, TV, even hallowed books, are just rubbish because they don't involve me," he said. "It's a sea of blandness."
Mr Molyneux said that he wanted to create a character "that seemed alive, that would look me in the eyes, and feel real".
Hidden technology
Milo was first shown off in a demo at the E3 expo in 2009, but has not been seen since.
"There was a huge row online about that with people saying 'this can't be real'," Mr Molyneux said.
The live demonstration used Microsoft's soon-to-be released Kinect controller, which uses a series of sensors, cameras and microphones to interpret a player's intentions.
The demo was conducted by an assistant, who showed Milo exploring a garden, learning to skim stones and finally confiding in him after being told off by his parents.
"We're changing the mind of Milo constantly," he said.
"No two people's Milos can be the same - you are actually sculpting a human being. Some of the things you are doing will change the course of his life."
Mr Molyneux said Milo had been built using artificial intelligence developed by his firm Lionhead studios, along with technology that was "hidden in the dusty vaults of Microsoft".
He said the system exploited psychological techniques to make a person feel that Milo was real.
In addition, software allowed "complete control" over subtle facial elements such as blushing and even the diameter of Milo's nostrils, which he said could denote stress.
"Most of it is just a trick - but it is a trick that actually works," he said.
During the demonstration, the player egged Milo on to squash a snail in the garden.
Mr Molyneux said that commands such as these were interpreted by Milo using voice-recognition software along with a database that attempted to interpret the players intonation and meaning.
These seemingly inconsequential events could also impact on Milo's later life and development in the game, he said.
The demonstration showed the initial stages of the game, where players learn to interact with Milo.
"After three-quarters of a hour, he recognises you," said Mr Molyneux.
"I can promise you that if you are sitting in front of this screen, that is a truly wonderful moment."
He said that the later stages of the game, which were not shown, allowed a player to explore the landscape with Milo more freely.
"There are lots of adventures - some of which are quite dark," he said.
At the moment, the technology is still in development and Microsoft has no plans to release it, he said.
However, he hinted that the game was designed to be used for millions of people and therefore could one day become a commercial product.
"His mind is based in the cloud," he told the audience. "As millions of people use it, Milo will get smarter."
'Good news'
Mr Molyneux showed off the technology at TED Global (Technology, Entertainment and Design), the European version of an established US event.
The invitation-only conferences explore "ideas worth spreading" and have featured talks by the former UK prime minister Gordon Brown and Nobel laureates as well as lesser-known technologists and designers.
This theme of this year's event is, "and now the good news".
"Good news has become a near-extinct species," said Bruno Giussani, European director of TED at the opening of the conference.
"But if you dig deeper, there is new technology, new science, new art, new ways of collaborating that offer a more hopeful view of the future."
Invited speakers at this year's TED include a voting system designer, a women's rights activist, a green chef and a physicist who runs a lab that aims to allow anyone to make almost anything.
Each is given 18 minutes in front of the audience.
This year's conference runs from 13 to 16 July in Oxford, UK.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Community Service instead of Military Service

An army of volunteers
The end of conscription may have uncharitable effects
Jul 15th 2010 | BERLIN

SIX days a week a small fleet of compact cars sets off from the Diakonie-Zentrum in Mariendorf in southern Berlin to deliver cheap hot meals to pensioners in the district. More often than not they are driven by “Zivis”, young men who have refused military service and so are obliged to spend nine months in “community service” instead. Some 90,000 a year man hospitals, sports clubs and kindergartens across Germany (a lucky few monitor eagles in the forest). Anything involving driving is popular. Alexander Fläschner, a meals-on-wheels man, is happy “to see a bit of Berlin by car” before he begins his studies in the city.

The government’s decision to shorten basic military service from nine months to six and the possibility it might be eliminated altogether is causing worry at the Mariendorf centre and at thousands of similar outfits. Since community service is an alternative to conscription, it will be cut back to the same degree. Ending it altogether would have “huge consequences” for “social welfare as a whole”, says Jens Kreuter, the federal official in charge of the service.

Zivis are not supposed to replace regular workers, nor do they often have the skills. They provide useful, and for some people vital, extra services. Often they are the ones who read to folk at old-age homes. For some people who cannot feed themselves the choice may be between a Zivi and a feeding tube. They are thought to bring fresh ideas to the organisations they serve and to take away a more rounded view of the world. Mr Fläschner says he feels “enriched” by his contact with the aged.

Some 12,000 help out at Diakonie, a vast charity linked to the Protestant church (of which the Mariendorf meal service is a part). The shortening of service to six months will make it hard for Zivis to perform some functions. It will be “hardly possible” to train them to provide accident assistance to the Diakonie’s rescue service, says Kerstin Griese, the group’s head of social policy. In Mariendorf three of the seven drivers are Zivis; they cost less and work longer hours than the others. If community service is eliminated, says Heidi Adams, the manager, the cost of the meals will have to go up.

Charities hope that Zivis will opt to stay for the extra three months, or longer (it looks as if a third will do so). Ms Griese wants the government to provide extra funds for a voluntary “social year” if community service is eliminated. She thinks Germany has something to learn from the United States, where volunteerism among the young is “almost an obligation”. If lawmakers remove the compulsion to serve, perhaps a sense of duty will take its place.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

The Man Who Was Thursday

the-man-who-was-thursday.jpg

GLOBAL: Millions wasted on shipping food aid





Photo: Chuck Simmins/Flickr 
Aid has many hidden costs
JOHANNESBURG, 13 July 2010 (IRIN) - US taxpayers spend about US$140 million every year on non-emergency food aid in Africa, and roughly the same amount to ship food aid to global destinations on US vessels; money that could have been used to feed more people says a new study by researchers at Cornell University in the US.

The US Agency for International Development (USAID) has accounted for more than half of the world's food aid every year for decades, but has been "the last and slowest donor to reform its food aid policies", noted Christopher Barrett, a leading food aid expert, and his colleagues, Elizabeth Bageant and Erin Lentz.

Their study, Food Aid and Agricultural Cargo Preference, has come up with the numbers to back a long-standing call for reforms, and goes a step further in showing that the policy designed to "nurture" or subsidise the US shipping industry "under the guise of humanitarian assistance" is not doing either effectively.

Most donors have moved towards cash transfers or vouchers to buy food, instead of providing food as aid, but the paper points out that most countries only had agribusiness and some NGO interests to contend with while reforming their food aid policy.

Reforms in the US have faced much tougher opposition from "a uniquely effective lobby", referred to as the "iron triangle", comprising agribusiness, the shipping sector and some NGOs.

Barrett and Daniel Maxwell, an associate professor at Tufts University, Boston, in the US, who wrote at length about the "iron triangle" in their 2005 book, Food Aid After Fifty Years: Recasting Its Role, estimated that it cost more than two dollars of US taxpayers' money to deliver one dollar's worth of food procured as in-kind aid.

''If our objective is to generate US jobs, why do so through a humanitarian food aid programme, rather than focusing on generating jobs directly''
Little known shipping subsidy 


Little has been written about the costs and effects of a policy called the Agricultural Cargo Preference (ACP), which affects the shipping sector of the "iron triangle", and USAID, the world's largest food aid programme.

The ACP requires that 75 percent of US food aid be shipped on privately owned, US registered vessels, even if they do not offer the most competitive rates. Some of these costs are reimbursed by the Department of Transportation's Maritime Administration, but ultimately the US taxpayer foots the entire bill. 
The Cornell researchers used data available for every USAID food aid shipment in 2006, when ACP cost US taxpayers $140 million, "The amount paid above the regular cost of ocean freight on the competitive market," said Barrett.

ACP was calculated by taking into account the costs of transporting the food aid on competing foreign vessels plying the same waters, after deducting the ACP costs borne by US Department of Agriculture food aid programmes, and reimbursements.

The un-reimbursed cost of ACP to food aid agencies was almost the same as what USAID spent on non-emergency food aid to Africa, which benefited 1.2 million people and was "widely deemed important to preventing food emergencies". USAID declined to comment on the findings of the study, saying the research "spoke for itself".

About 20 years ago the US Government Accountability Office (GAO), an independent investigative arm of Congress, looked at the costs of shipping food aid in US-flag vessels rather than using cheaper foreign ships, and estimated that it cost $150 million each year. Another report in 1994 put the cost as high as $200 million a year.

Failing shipping as well 

The ACP was put in place to achieve four objectives: ensure that US vessels remained seaworthy and prepared should a war break out; maintain skilled jobs for American seafarers; maintain the financial viability of US ships; protect US ocean commerce from foreign domination.

Barrett, Bageant and Lentz found that "contrary to its national security and 'buy American' objectives", ACP used vessels which were not useful to the military, and most of the vessels used were ultimately owned by foreign corporations.

They recommended that the US administration revisit the ACP, and suggested separating security objectives from humanitarian ones, with direct support for the Maritime Security Program.

But shipping industry says 

The US shipping industry, which produced its own study - Impacts on the US Economy of Shipping International Food Aid - around the same time as the Cornell researchers, argues that eliminating the ACP would shrink the US-flag merchant fleet by 15 percent to 30 percent, with the loss of between 16,500 and 33,000 jobs.

Barrett said the shipping industry's study had used "very crude multipliers not developed for this application, and seem to use the total ocean freight costs, not the marginal cost of cargo preference, thereby assuming that every maritime job would disappear. That's a highly questionable assumption that they then inflate, using highly questionable multipliers".

The Cornell study's calculations showed that US taxpayers were paying a subsidy of almost $100,000 every year per mariner on an ACP vessel shipping food aid. "That's a pretty handsome subsidy," he commented.

"One would hope there would be some economic multiplier. The question is whether that's the best use of those funds, if our objective is to generate US jobs; and if the objective is to generate US jobs, why do so through a humanitarian food aid programme, rather than focusing on generating jobs directly?"

Friday, July 2, 2010

West Africa - in Search of More Aid As 10 Million Face Hunger

Lagos — Over 10 million people are at risk of hunger in the Sahel before the September harvests, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization's (FAO). In Niger, about half of the 13.4 million inhabitants are facing hunger. Up to two million Chadians and hundreds of thousands of Mauritanians and Malians also need assistance.
There have been early interventions and prepositioning, but more should have been done earlier, say aid workers and the response needs to be urgently scaled up.
In late 2009, the Famine Early Warning System Network highlighted signs of the crisis: a drop in cereal production, poor pastoral conditions and a dangerous combination of poverty and high food prices.
"There are always delays in supply pipelines. This means that decisions taken today will have an impact on the ground in late July or August. Food distributions should have started in April or May," said the Swiss operation director of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), Bruno Jochum.
Support remains crucial, he added, since during the months of August and September, people are typically left with no food while they wait for the next harvest.
Only 57 percent of the US$190 million emergency appeal by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) for Niger is funded. In Chad, the World Food Programme (WFP) still lacks $23 million of the $65 million required for the food crisis.
The head of the European Commission Humanitarian Aid Office (ECHO) for West Africa, Cyprien Fabre, noted, however, that the donor response is timelier than in 2005, when the food crisis caught many unprepared. This time, he said, early warning and response mechanisms were in place in most affected countries and funds were rapidly allocated.
"Operations are well under way in Niger, Burkina Faso and Mali. In Chad, more actors are needed to respond properly. Funding will be available, if necessary."
Chad
The situation in the Sahelian belt of Chad is especially worrying. "Chad is somehow like Niger in 2005," explained the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) regional adviser for nutrition, Félicité Tchibindat. "The number of organizations on the ground is limited, so is the political will. On the bright side, humanitarian agencies and donors are now starting to respond."
Such mobilization will help, but the imminent start of the rainy season will make the tricky task of bringing assistance to remote villages in a landlocked country even more challenging. WFP indicates that it can take as long as 3-5 months for food to arrive in Chad. In parts of the country, roads will be officially closed as of the end of June because of the rains.
"Even if there are cargos and cargos of stocks, if they cannot be delivered, people will not get food. Without prepositioned food, it will become very difficult. Agencies may have to look into air deliveries," said OCHA's public information, advocacy and donor relations officer for West Africa, Yvon A. Edoumou.
"Very vulnerable"
If there are normal harvests in the autumn, the population is expected to recover at the end of the year. A normal to wet rainy season is forecast by the Permanent Inter-State Committee for Drought Control in the Sahel (CILSS).
Precipitation is crucial in a region where most agriculture is rain-fed. "If the rains fail, it will be a catastrophe in the whole region. People's assets are significantly depleted. They have borrowed money to eat and are now waiting for the rains," said ECHO's Fabre.
The Sahel countries are among the poorest in the world. A third of the population of Chad and Niger is chronically undernourished. Each year, 300,000 under-five children die of malnutrition, according to UNICEF.
"The population is already very vulnerable," said OCHA's Edoumou. "When you live from one day to the next, any shock provokes a crisis. If the rains are poor, if the cattle are affected by a mysterious disease, people are in difficulty."
Source: Humanitarian news and analysis (A project of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs)
Copyright © 2010 Daily Champion. All rights reserved. Distributed by AllAfrica Global Media (allAfrica.com).

Boston University Professor Finds Genes Predicting Living to 100


By Victoria Gill
Elderly person with walking stickThe test is based on the largest study of centenarians in the world
US scientists have developed a way of predicting how likely a person is to live beyond the age of 100.
The breakthrough, described in the journal Science, is based on 150 genetic "signposts" found in exceptionally long-lived people.
The Boston team created a mathematical model, which takes information from these signposts to work out a person's chance of reaching 100.
It is based on the largest study of centenarians in the world.
This is a rare trait - only one in 6,000 people in industrialised countries reaches such a ripe old age. And 90% them are still disability free by the age of 93.
The researchers now think they have cracked the genetic secret of this longevity.
The team originally embarked on their study in 1995. Since then, they have scanned the genomes of 1,000 centenarians.
They identified genetic markers that are "most different" between centenarians and randomly selected individuals.
The research was led by Paola Sebastiani, a professor of biostatistics at Boston University, and Thomas Perls, associate professor of medicine, also at Boston University.
"We tested our model in an independent set of centenarians and achieved an accuracy of 77%," explained Professor Sebastiani.
"So out of 100 centenarians we could correctly predict the outcome of 77."
She said that the "23% error rate" indicated that, although "genetics is fundamental in exceptional longevity it's not the only thing".
"So there may be other factors like environment or other lifestyles that may help people live longer and healthier lives."
Enriched lives
Professor Perls explained that a previous study had looked at longevity in a group of people belonging to the Seventh-day Adventist Church.
"Those individuals have probably among the highest average life expectancy that we know of in the US of 88 years," he said.

What makes these people live a very long life is not a lack of genetic predisposition to diseases, but rather an enrichment of longevity.
Paola SebastianiBoston University
"They get there by virtue of the fact that they have a religion that asks them to be vegetarian, they regularly exercise, they don't drink alcohol, they tend to manage their stress well through religion and time with family and they don't smoke.
"To live the additional 10-15 years beyond the age of 88, our paper is indicating that genetics are playing an increasingly important role."
The scientists said that, when it came to genes associated with a predisposition to age-related diseases, centenarians and non-centenarians did not really differ.
"This is very surprising," said Professor Sebastiani. "It suggests that what makes these people live a very long life is not a lack of genetic predisposition to diseases, but rather an enrichment of longevity."
Lifespan website
Professor Perls said it was feasible that a simple test could be developed to screen people's chances of being so long-lived.
"I think that that's a possibility down the road," he said. "It brings up this whole field of personal medicine and being able to use genetic information in the future to help guide therapy."
But he added that there should be "a great deal of caution in thinking about what people might actually do with the information".
"Will that stop companies from going ahead and [developing some kind of chip-based test]? Probably not," he said,
"But we think it's really important to understand what people end up doing with this information, including thinking about social entitlements - that merits a lot more discussion."
Professor Sebastiani added: "We have a long list of things to do here.... to understand the real biology behind what we have found."
Elderly woman (SPL)
Exceptional longevity is not this vacuous entity that no one can figure out
Thomas PerlsBoston University
One of the co-authors of the Science paper is already building a free-to use website where people will be able to use the mathematical model.
On that site, which could be up and running within a week, people who know their genetic code could work out their predisposition to exceptional longevity.
"The site would provide some description of how to interpret the results in the right context," Professor Sebastiani explained.
Dr Jeffrey Barrett, a geneticist from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in Cambridge, UK, cautioned that "subtle biases could make the test seem more accurate than it really is".
"Some of the genetic variants in this study are claimed to have much, much stronger effects on longevity than we've seen in similar studies of diabetes, heart disease and cancer," he told BBC News.
"Evaluation of the test by an independent laboratory will be the ultimate test of its accuracy."
Professor Perls summed up the findings as "a very optimistic message".
"Exceptional longevity is not this vacuous entity that no one can figure out," he said.
"I think we've made quite some inroads here in terms of demonstrating a pretty important genetic component to this wonderful trait, and this really opens the door to future research."

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Starvation in Western Africa

Mass starvation warned in West Africa

Henry Foy
10 million face conditions of 1984 Ethiopia famine


Severe crisis: A woman with her malnourished baby at an intensive nutritional rehabilitation centre in Tanout, southern Niger, late April.
Starving people in drought-stricken west Africa are being forced to eat leaves and collect grain from ant hills, say aid agencies, warning that 10 million people face starvation across the region.

With food prices soaring and malnourished livestock dying, villagers were turning to any sources of food to stay alive, said Charles Bambara, Oxfam officer for the west African region.

“People are eating wild fruit and leaves, and building ant hills just to capture the tiny amount of grain that the ants collect inside. The situation here in Chad is desperate. There is not enough food in the country, over 2 million people here are not getting enough,” said Mr. Bambara.

In Niger, which the United Nations classifies as the world's least developed country, starving families are eating flour mixed with wild leaves and boiled plants.

More than 7 million people — almost half the population — face food insecurity in the country, making it the hardest hit by the crisis.

According to U.N. agencies, 2,00,000 children need treatment for malnutrition in Niger alone.

“Niger is at crisis point now and we need to act quickly before this crisis becomes a full-blown humanitarian disaster,” said Caroline Gluck, an Oxfam representative in the country.

With food prices spiralling, people are being forced to slaughter malnourished livestock, traditionally the only form of income.

“When you walk through the markets, you can see that there is food here. The problem is that the ability to buy it has disappeared. People here depend on livestock to support themselves, but animals are being killed on the edge of exhaustion, and that means they are being sold for far less money. And on top of that, the cost of food basics has risen,” explained Ms. Gluck.

Compounding the crisis, thousands of animals have starved to death as villagers use animal fodder to feed themselves. Oxfam has launched a £7-million emergency appeal to try to avert a humanitarian catastrophe, after failed harvests and widespread drought brought severe hunger and malnutrition across the region. Save the Children has launched a separate £7 million appeal.

“This is just the beginning of the traditional hunger period, and people have already been forced to sell their livestock. This is very early for the alarm bells to be ringing, before Niger has even reached the start of the most critical part of the food calendar. You can imagine three to four months down the line how shocking the situation will be,” said Ms. Gluck.

“Yesterday I saw women sifting through gravel at the side of the road, trying to find some grains that may have been blown from aid trucks,” said Ms. Gluck, as hungry and impoverished villagers flocked to the country's capital, Niamey, in search of food. Ms. Gluck has likened the developing situation to that of the 1984 famine in Ethiopia, during which an estimated 1 million people died due to drought and a slow response to the crisis both within the country and internationally. “West Africa has traditionally not been very high on the developed world's priority list. The question now is how many people do we have to see die before the world will act?” she said. — © Guardian Newspapers Limited, 2010

For want of a drink

A special report on water

Finite, vital, much wanted, little understood, water looks unmanageable. But it needn’t be, argues John Grimond (interviewed here)












WHEN the word water appears in print these days, crisis is rarely far behind. Water, it is said, is the new oil: a resource long squandered, now growing expensive and soon to be overwhelmed by insatiable demand. Aquifers are falling, glaciers vanishing, reservoirs drying up and rivers no longer flowing to the sea. Climate change threatens to make the problems worse. Everyone must use less water if famine, pestilence and mass migration are not to sweep the globe. As it is, wars are about to break out between countries squabbling over dams and rivers. If the apocalypse is still a little way off, it is only because the four horsemen and their steeds have stopped to search for something to drink.

The language is often overblown, and the remedies sometimes ill conceived, but the basic message is not wrong. Water is indeed scarce in many places, and will grow scarcer. Bringing supply and demand into equilibrium will be painful, and political disputes may increase in number and intensify in their capacity to cause trouble. To carry on with present practices would indeed be to invite disaster.

Why? The difficulties start with the sheer number of people using the stuff. When, 60 years ago, the world’s population was about 2.5 billion, worries about water supply affected relatively few people. Both drought and hunger existed, as they have throughout history, but most people could be fed without irrigated farming. Then the green revolution, in an inspired combination of new crop breeds, fertilisers and water, made possible a huge rise in the population. The number of people on Earth rose to 6 billion in 2000, nearly 7 billion today, and is heading for 9 billion in 2050. The area under irrigation has doubled and the amount of water drawn for farming has tripled. The proportion of people living in countries chronically short of water, which stood at 8% (500m) at the turn of the 21st century, is set to rise to 45% (4 billion) by 2050. And already 1 billion people go to bed hungry each night, partly for lack of water to grow food.

Farmers’ increasing demand for water is caused not only by the growing number of mouths to be fed but also by people’s desire for better-tasting, more interesting food. Unfortunately, it takes nearly twice as much water to grow a kilo of peanuts as a kilo of soyabeans, nearly four times as much to produce a kilo of beef as a kilo of chicken, and nearly five times as much to produce a glass of orange juice as a cup of tea. With 2 billion people around the world about to enter the middle class, the agricultural demands on water would increase even if the population stood still.People in temperate climates where the rain falls moderately all the year round may not realise how much water is needed for farming. In Britain, for example, farming takes only 3% of all water withdrawals. In the United States, by contrast, 41% goes for agriculture, almost all of it for irrigation. In China farming takes nearly 70%, and in India nearer 90%. For the world as a whole, agriculture accounts for almost 70%.

Industry, too, needs water. It takes about 22% of the world’s withdrawals. Domestic activities take the other 8%. Together, the demands of these two categories quadrupled in the second half of the 20th century, growing twice as fast as those of farming, and forecasters see nothing but further increases in demand on all fronts.


That’s your lot

Meeting that demand is a different task from meeting the demand for almost any other commodity. One reason is that the supply of water is finite. The world will have no more of it in 2025, or 2050, or when the cows come home, than it has today, or when it lapped at the sides of Noah’s ark. This is because the law of conservation of mass says, broadly, that however you use it, you cannot destroy the stuff. Neither can you readily make it. If some of it seems to come from the skies, that is because it has evaporated from the Earth’s surface, condensed and returned.

Most of this surface is sea, and the water below it—over 97% of the total on Earth—is salty. In principle the salt can be removed to increase the supply of fresh water, but at present desalination is expensive and uses lots of energy. Although costs have come down, no one expects it to provide wide-scale irrigation soon.

Of the 2½% of water that is not salty, about 70% is frozen, either at the poles, in glaciers or in permafrost. So all living things, except those in the sea, have about 0.75% of the total to survive on. Most of this available water is underground, in aquifers or similar formations. The rest is falling as rain, sitting in lakes and reservoirs or flowing in rivers where it is, with luck, replaced by rainfall and melting snow and ice. There is also, take note, water vapour in the atmosphere.

These geophysical facts affect the use of language in discussions about water, and the ways in which to think about the problems of scarcity. As Julia Bucknall, the World Bank’s water supremo, points out, demand and supply are economic concepts, which the matchmakers of the dismal science are constantly trying to bring into balance. In the context of water, though, supply is also a physical concept and its maximum is fixed.

Use is another awkward word. If your car runs out of petrol, you have used a tankful. The petrol has been broken down and will not soon be reconstituted. But if you drain a tank of water for your shower, have you used it? Yes, in a sense. But could it not be collected to invigorate the plants in your garden? And will some of it not then seep into the ground to refill an aquifer, or perhaps run into a river, from either of which someone else may draw it? This water has been used, but not in the sense of rendered incapable of further use. Water is not the new oil.

However, there are some “uses” that leave it unusable for anyone else. That is either when it evaporates, from fields, swimming pools, reservoirs or cooling towers, or when it transpires, in the photosynthetic process whereby water vapour passes from the leaves of growing plants into the atmosphere. These two processes, known in combination as evapotranspiration (ET), tend to be overlooked by water policymakers. Yet over 60% of all the rain and snow that hits the ground cannot be captured because it evaporates from the soil or transpires through plants. Like water that cannot be recovered for a specific use because it has run into the sea or perhaps a saline aquifer, water lost through ET is, at least until nature recycles it, well and truly used—or, in the language of the water world, “consumed”, ie, not returned to the system for possible reuse.

The problems caused by inexact terminology do not end here. Concepts like efficiency, productivity and saving attract woolly thinking. Chris Perry, an irrigation economist widely considered the high priest of water accounting, points out that “efficient” domestic systems involve virtually no escape of water through evaporation or irrecoverable seepage. “Efficient” irrigation, though, is often used to describe systems that result in 85% of the water disappearing in vapour. Similarly, water is not saved by merely using less of it for a purpose such as washing or irrigation; it is saved only if less is rendered irrecoverable.


Soaked, parched, poached

Many of these conceptual difficulties arise from other unusual aspects of water. It is a commodity whose value varies according to locality, purpose and circumstance. Take locality first. Water is not evenly distributed—just nine countries account for 60% of all available fresh supplies—and among them only Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Congo, Indonesia and Russia have an abundance. America is relatively well off, but China and India, with over a third of the world’s population between them, have less than 10% of its water.

Even within countries the variations may be huge. The average annual rainfall in India’s north-east is 110 times that in its western desert. And many places have plenty of water, or even far too much, at some times of year, but not nearly enough at others. Most of India’s crucial rain is brought by the summer monsoon, which falls, with luck, in just a few weeks between June and September. Flooding is routine, and may become more frequent and damaging with climate change.

Scarce or plentiful, water is above all local. It is heavy—one cubic metre weighs a tonne—so expensive to move. If you are trying to manage it, you must first divide your area of concern into drainage basins. Surface water—mostly rivers, lakes and reservoirs—will not flow from one basin into another without artificial diversion, and usually only with pumping. Within a basin, the water upstream may be useful for irrigation, industrial or domestic use. As it nears the sea, though, the opportunities diminish to the point where it has no uses except to sustain deltas, wetlands and the estuarial ecology, and to carry silt out to sea.












These should not be overlooked. If rivers do not flow, nothing can live in them. Over a fifth of the world’s freshwater fish species of a century ago are now endangered or extinct. Half the world’s wetlands have also disappeared over the past 100 years. The point is, though, that even within a basin water is more valuable in some places than in others.

Almost anywhere arid, the water underground, once largely ignored, has come to be seen as especially valuable as the demands of farmers have outgrown their supplies of rain and surface water. Groundwater has come to the rescue, and for a while it seemed a miraculous solution: drill a borehole, pump the stuff up from below and in due course it will be replaced. In some places it is indeed replenished quite quickly if rain or surface water is available and the geological and soil conditions are favourable. In many places, however, from the United States to India and China, the quantities being withdrawn exceed the annual recharge. This is serious for millions of people not just in the country but also in many of the world’s biggest cities, which often depend on aquifers for their drinking water.

The 20m inhabitants of Mexico City and its surrounding area, for example, draw over 70% of their water from an aquifer that will run dry, at current extraction rates, within 200 years, maybe much sooner. Already the city is sinking as a result. In Bangkok, Buenos Aires and Jakarta, the aquifers are similarly overdrawn, polluted or contaminated by salt. Just as serious is the depletion of the aquifers on which farmers depend. In the Hai river basin in China, for example, deep-groundwater tables have dropped by up to 90 metres.

Part of the beauty of the borehole is that it requires no elaborate apparatus; a single farmer may be able to sink his own tubewell and start pumping. That is why India and China are now perforated with millions of irrigation wells, each drawing on a common resource. Sometimes this resource will be huge: the High Plains aquifer, for example, covers 450,000 square kilometres below eight American states and the GuaranĂ­ aquifer extends across 1.2m square kilometres below parts of Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. But even big aquifers are not immune to the laws of physics. Parts of the High Plains are seriously overdrawn. In the United States, China and many other places, farmers probably have to pay something for the right to draw groundwater. But almost nowhere will the price reflect scarcity, and often there is no charge at all and no one measures how much water is being taken.


Liquid asset or human right?

Priced or not, water is certainly valued, and that value depends on the use to which it is harnessed. Water is used not just to grow food but to make every kind of product, from microchips to steel girders. The largest industrial purpose to which it is put is cooling in thermal power generation, but it is also used in drilling for and extracting oil, the making of petroleum products and ethanol, and the production of hydro-electricity. Some of the processes involved, such as hydro power generation, consume little water (after driving the turbines, most is returned to the river), but some, such as the techniques used to extract oil from sands, are big consumers.

Industrial use takes about 60% of water in rich countries and 10% in the rest. The difference in domestic use is much smaller, 11% and 8% respectively. Some of the variation is explained by capacious baths, power showers and flush lavatories in the rich world. All humans, however, need a basic minimum of two litres of water in food or drink each day, and for this there is no substitute. No one survived in the ruins of Port-au-Prince for more than a few days after January’s earthquake unless they had access to some water-based food or drink. That is why many people in poor and arid countries—usually women or children—set off early each morning to trudge to the nearest well and return five or six hours later burdened with precious supplies. That is why many people believe water to be a human right, a necessity more basic than bread or a roof over the head.

From this much follows. One consequence is a widespread belief that no one should have to pay for water. The Byzantine emperor Justinian declared in the sixth century that “by natural law” air, running water, the sea and seashore were “common to all”. Many Indians agree, seeing groundwater in particular as a “democratic resource”. In Africa it is said that “even the jackal deserves to drink”.

A second consequence is that water often has a sacred or mystical quality that is invested in deities like Gong Gong and Osiris and rivers like the Jordan and the Ganges. Throughout history, man’s dependence on water has made him live near it or organise access to it. Water is in his body—it makes up about 60%—and in his soul. It has provided not just life and food but a means of transport, a way of keeping clean, a mechanism for removing sewage, a home for fish and other animals, a medium with which to cook, in which to swim, on which to skate and sail, a thing of beauty to provide inspiration, to gaze upon and to enjoy. No wonder a commodity with so many qualities, uses and associations has proved so difficult to organise.