Whether trying to live with the depressing spectacle of
drought or battling rampaging floods or suffering with a debilitating disease
caused by contaminated drinking supplies, people in almost every corner of the
world have had their problems with the vagaries of water. Although water covers
much of our planet, more than 97% is in the oceans. Another 2% is unusable ice.
Moreover, much of the remainder is polluted. So much for the supposed abundance!
Developed and developing countries alike are now talking about a
crisis. What of the future Will water needs reach a peak
Unhappily, UN experts expect demands to double in the next 25 years. 61. This
will coincide with increasing population and industrialization and the attendant
risk of factory and human waste further contaminating rivers, lakes and ground
water. So, is there any hope of a solution The answer, fortunately, is that
the problem is being tackled. 62. Specialists in many
countries are developing methods to improve supply and conservation and protect
quality, and a number of ambitious programs have been undertaken. Good
forecasting--including predictions of snow, rain, river levels and soil
loss--can help scientists head off, or at least cope with floods. Canals can
ease one of the major water-related problems, drought. With something tike three
quarters of the world’ s fresh water tied up as ice, plans to drag icebergs to
drought areas have been around for a long time; attempts to overcome the
drawbacks are still being made. A great deal of energy would be needed to the
ice and pump the water inland, and the ice might melt before reaching its
destination. In addition, research into desalting seawater continues with new
and improving desalting methods although no method can yet promise truly
low-cost fresh water. Fossil water--underground water dating back to the ice age
could be drilled for in some areas but supplies are non-renewable. Work
continues in all these areas. It is obvious that a lot of time, money and
research is going into finding solutions to some of the problems.
63. However, worldwide, the ugly fact remains that something like 250
million new cases of waterborne diseases are discovered every year and 25,000
people die from them every day. Pollution continues to plague all of us.
"Even as the rain falls", says Russell W. Peterson, former chairman of the US
Council on Environmental Quality, "It scours pollutants from the air. In fact,
nearly all the pollutants the people of the world discharge into the air end up
in our water systems." 64. Therefore, whether tainted by industrial waste,
sewage or other pollution, unreliable water supplies frequently create breeding
grounds for deadly water-borne diseases when safeguards and purification are
inadequate. Millions of people, therefore, continue to be affected by
water-related problems and contrary to popular belief, future water supplies are
not inexhaustible. So the situation is very serious, especially in view of the
UN estimates of demand. 65. Although projects to provide ever increasing
supplies of water indicate that a growing number of countries are aware of the
present problems and of those to come, these more often than not are highly
expensive and not very practical, and very time-consuming when time is commodity
in short supply. Therefore, while research in these areas is important, the
eventual solution would definitely appear to be worldwide conservation and
pollution controlin other words, a greater respect for our most valuable natural
resource.