Water footprints make a splash
If
the full water requirements of a morning roast are calculated - farm
irrigation, bean transportation, and the serving of the coffee - one
cup requires 140 liters of water. This notion of a product's 'water
footprint' is gaining traction. Defined as the total volume of
freshwater required to produce a nation's goods and services, the tool
tracks domestic water demand and the impact of consumption on water
resources across the globe.
As world water availability begins to decline as the result of
population growth, overconsumption, and climate change, more water
advocates are encouraging governments and consumers to internalize the
true cost of water through an account of their water footprint.
The global water footprint is about 7.5 trillion cubic meters per
year, not including irrigation losses, according to estimates [PDF] by
Dutch researchers and the United Nations Educational Scientific and
Cultural Organization (UNESCO). India, with 17 percent of the global
population, has the largest water footprint in absolute terms. But its
footprint represents only 13 percent of the world total. The United
States, in comparison, comprises 4.5 percent of the world population
and consumes 9 percent of the world's water.
Agriculture has the greatest impact on a water footprint. Global
crop production requires more than 6 trillion cubic meters of water
each year, with nearly a quarter of supplies flowing to rice paddies.
Livestock production requires the most water resources in the food
chain. One hamburger, for instance, needs 2,400 liters of water on
average.
During World Water Week, which runs through Sunday, the water
footprint concept is benefiting from a spike in attention. This year's
Stockholm Water Prize was awarded to professor John Anthony Allan of
King's College London for introducing the predecessor to water
footprints: the term 'virtual water' - the volume of water required to
produce a commodity or service.
The conservation group WWF-UK estimated that the 4,645 average
liters of water that Britons consume daily leads the country to import
62 percent of its water sources - making it the sixth largest net
importer worldwide behind Brazil, Mexico, Japan, China, and Italy,
according to a report released Wednesday. 'Only 38 percent of the UK's
total water use comes from its own rivers, lakes and groundwater
reserves,' said WWF's Stuart Orr in a press statement. 'The rest is
taken from...water resources [often] stressed or very likely to become
so in the near future.'
Plastic manufacturer Borealis and plumbing supplier Uponor revealed
a joint plan to include water footprints in the future planning of
plastic products on Wednesday. 'Understanding our footprint can be a
key tool to further guide the development of more water-saving
products,' said Tarmo Anttlla, Uponor's communication vice president,
in a prepared statement.
Roughly one-third of the world population is estimated to be living
in areas of water scarcity. Unless water footprints recede, fierce
conflicts over water resources are likely unavoidable, experts warn.
'Feeding everyone - including the undernourished and additional 3
billion people expected in 2050 - will require 50 percent more water
than is needed today,' said Anders Berntell, executive director of
Stockholm International Water Institute at the World Water Week opening
ceremony. 'We are not prepared to deal with the implications this has
for our planet.'
Contact information |
Julia Tier, Worldwatch Institute
(email: jtier@worldwatch.org ; bblock@worldwatch.org) |
---|---|
News type | Inbrief |
File link |
http://www.worldwatch.org/node/5869 |
Source of information | Worldwatch Institute |
Keyword(s) | Water footprints, agriculture, climate change, groundwater, irrigation, water resources |
Subject(s) | AGRICULTURE , HYDRAULICS - HYDROLOGY , POLICY-WATER POLICY AND WATER MANAGEMENT , RISKS AND CLIMATOLOGY , WATER DEMAND |
Relation | http://www.waterfootprint.org/Reports/Hoekstra_and_Chapagain_2007.pdf |
Geographical coverage | International |
News date | 29/08/2008 |
Working language(s) | ENGLISH |