×
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

World's rivers in danger

Last Updated 06 December 2010, 11:47 IST

This is the finding of the first global initiative that assessed water security for people and river biodiversity.

Eleven scientists identified 23 stressors such as pollution, intensive agriculture, catchment disturbance and dam building, and integrated them to prepare maps showing their impact on the health of rivers and associated habitat.

The maps show 30 of the 47 largest river systems that collectively discharge half of the global runoff to the oceans are at risk. Rich countries in Europe and North America have offset the risks of losing drinking water supply by 95 per cent through massive investment in technologies such as dams, aqueducts, deep borewells and water treatment plants and ensured safe and sufficient water to their people.

But this has been done at the cost of river ecology, the scientists reported in an issue of Nature.

The maps show the river systems in most of the US and western Europe are at the greatest risk despite decades of pollution-control efforts and technological means to protect and restore river ecosystems.

Dams in plenty

For instance, Peter McIntyre, one of the scientists who is at University of Wisconsin in the US, explained that there are thousands of dams in each large river basin in North America.

They have systematically eliminated migratory fish like salmon and endangered dozens of mollusc species. “While we have technological innovations to secure water for humans, there is little innovation for biodiversity protection,” McIntyre said.

The report warns that similar degradation is occurring in developing countries, which do not have the resources to invest in technologies to clean their rivers and where population has been growing rapidly. Brazil, Russia, India, China and OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) countries need US $800 billion annually to improve their water infrastructure to meet the millennium development goal.

Threat for people & biodiversity

The maps show that because of poor investment, the developing world brings a high threat for both humans and biodiversity. The study urged developing nations not to follow the rich.

“Developing countries are in a position where they can achieve water security in a sustainable way,” said Bharat Jhunjhunwala, an economist in India who recently authored a book on dam removal in the US. The scientists suggest adopting strategies such as protecting watersheds to reduce costs of water treatment.

New York City, for example, bought an area of the Catskills Mountains to help provide naturally filtered water, reckoning it cheaper than upgrading its water treatment plant.

 Instead of building costly artificial barriers to allow cropland on floodplains, policymakers can consider options like preserving floodplains and wetlands as they absorb the shock of floods, they suggest.

Down To Earth Feature Service

ADVERTISEMENT
(Published 06 December 2010, 11:45 IST)

Follow us on

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT