Wed., 16.03.1433 Hjr / 08.02.2012, 19:43 Emirate time РусскийEnglishtürkçeУкраїнськийعربي

main

mirrors

add. formats
Google
Kavkaz-Center
WWW
Our button

News feeds
 
WorldEvents Also in this section

Water shortages are likely to be trigger for wars, UN warns

Publication time: 4 December 2007, 20:16

A struggle by nations to secure sources of clean water will be "potent fuel" for war, the first Asia-Pacific Water Summit heard yesterday.

The Secretary-General of the United Nations, Ban Ki Moon, told delegates from across the region that the planet faced a water crisis that was especially troubling for Asia.

High population growth, rising consumption, pollution and poor water management posed significant threats, he said, adding that climate change was also making "a bad situation worse".

Mr Ban went on to condemn the lack of heed paid by governments to these warning signs: "Throughout the world, water resources continue to be spoiled, wasted and degraded.

"The consequences for humanity are grave. Water scarcity threatens economic and social gains and is a potent fuel for wars and conflict."

His remarks come as environmental experts in Great Britain have identified 46 countries - home to 2.7 billion people - where climate change and water-related crises will create a high risk of violent conflict.

A further 56, representing another 1.2 billion people, are at high risk of political instability, claims a report by International Alert, which concludes that it is now "too late to believe the situation can be made safe solely by reducing carbon emissions worldwide and mitigating climate change".

Janani Vivekananda, one of the authors of the International Alert report said: "Water management will be a huge tinderbox and now is the time for international organisations to come together. There is huge potential not just for conflict but for co-operation."

Mr Ban's comments were echoed by many of the other speakers at the water summit, who gathered in southwestern Japan to discuss a range of issues, including policies that might prevent the various aspects of an Asian water crisis deepening into armed conflict.

Yasuo Fukuda, the Japanese Prime Minister, vowed yesterday that water and climate change would be at the top of the agenda for the Group of Eight summit in Japan next summer.

The Beppu summit, which began on the same day as UN Climate Change talks in Bali, also coincides with a study directly linking water shortages to violence throughout history.

In a report published in by the United States National Academy of Sciences journal today, David Zhang, of Hong Kong University, has analysed a half millennium's worth of human conflict - more than 8,000 wars - and concluded that climate change and resulting water shortage has been a far greater trigger than imagined previously.

If global warming continues, water shortages could trigger more wars, Dr Zhang told The Times: "We are on alert, because this gives us the indication that resource shortage is the main cause of war. Human beings will definitely have conflicts over this; whether it turns to war depends on the quality of the social buffer available to each nation, but the danger is right there."

The Asia Development Bank, which was also represented at the Beppu summit, informed delegates that without rational water development and better management, the future social development of Asian developing countries would be seriously jeopardised. The president of the ADB, Haruhiko Kuroda, said that his bank now plans to double investment in Asian water projects to billion per year, given the potential for conflict if water governance remains weak.

Source: The Times Online

Kavkaz Center



Putin did not like CE Emir Dokku Abu Usman's statement
Assad's regime in Syria steps up assault on Homs
Belgium ready to deport Chechen war hero for death in Russia
Syrian opposition threatens Russia with Jihad and expulsion of Russian thugs
Sweden continues to block information about arrested Chechen war hero
Syrian Alawite army steps up genocide of Muslims in Homs
Senator McCain warns bloody Russian dog Putin saying thug's days numbered
Mass arrests of Muslim youth in Kazakhstan
RUSSIAN SPRING. Russia's liberal intelligentsia begins to stir
Kadyrov’s espionage and terrorist network leader of Russian KGB, nicknamed Karamazov, deported from Austria
Protesters continue to battle police in Egypt
AUSTRIA. Chechen family to be deported to Russia, where it is threatened with persecution
WHITE REVOLUTION. This is serious message for Putin and his regime
Cairo street battles rage for third day
Rogue countries Russia and China veto UN resolution on Syria, encoraging mass murders by Alawite regime
Putin's anti-Semitism. KGB anti-Semitic thugs rob from Jews who refuse to cooperate with bloody secret police
Putinism. Negotiations with thief Putin senseless, he has Gaddafi's mentality
Confident Taliban wins the war
WHITE REVOLUTION. Counter-revolutionaries afraid of anti-Putin coup
WHITE REVOLUTION. 120,000 anti-putinists in Moscow held rally versus 15,000 putinists
Hundreds of casualties in Syria's Homs
Anti-putinists and putinists crowd rallies in Moscow
Deadly clashes in Egypt over football addicts' riots
Katyn 2. Poland's media compare assassinations of JFK and Polish President, Russians are involved in both terrorist attacks
RUSSIAN SPRING. Putin loses confidence in himself and is perplexed. He is being laughed at