Damage To Biodiversity: Water Crisis Is A Term Used To Refer To The World's
Damage To Biodiversity: Water Crisis Is A Term Used To Refer To The World's
Damage To Biodiversity: Water Crisis Is A Term Used To Refer To The World's
Inadequate access to safe drinking water for about 884 million people[9]
Inadequate access to water for sanitation and waste disposal for 2.5 billion people[10]
Waterborne diseases and the absence of sanitary domestic water are one of the leading causes of death
worldwide. For children under age five, waterborne diseases are the leading cause of death. At any given time,
half of the world's hospital beds are occupied by patients suffering from waterborne diseases. [12] According to
the World Bank, 88 percent of all waterborne diseases are caused by unsafe drinking water, inadequate
sanitation and poor hygiene.[13]
Drought dramatizes the underlying tenuous balance of safe water supply, but it is the imprudent actions of
humans that have rendered the human population vulnerable to the devastation of major droughts.
A 2006 United Nations report focuses on issues of governance as the core of the water crisis, saying "There is
enough water for everyone" and "Water insufficiency is often due to mismanagement, corruption, lack of
appropriate institutions, bureaucratic inertia and a shortage of investment in both human capacity and physical
infrastructure".[14] Official data also shows a clear correlation between access to safe water and GDP per capita.
[15]
It has also been claimed, primarily by economists, that the water situation has occurred because of a lack of
property rights, government regulations and subsidies in the water sector, causing prices to be too low and
consumption too high.[16][17][18]
Damage to Biodiversity
Vegetation and wildlife are fundamentally dependent upon adequate freshwater resources. Marshes, bogs and
riparian zones are more obviously dependent upon sustainable water supply, but forests and other upland
ecosystems are equally at risk of significant productivity changes as water availability is diminished. In the case
of wetlands, considerable area has been simply taken from wildlife use to feed and house the expanding human
population. But other areas have suffered reduced productivity from gradual diminishing of freshwater inflow,
as upstream sources are diverted for human use. In seven states of the U.S. over 80 percent of all historic
wetlands were filled by the 1980s, when Congress acted to create a no net loss of wetlands.
In Europe extensive loss of wetlands has also occurred with resulting loss of biodiversity or not. For example
many bogs in Scotland have been developed or diminished through human population expansion. One example
is the Portlethen Moss in Aberdeenshire.
On Madagascars highland plateau, a massive transformation occurred that eliminated virtually all the heavily
forested vegetation in the period 1970 to 2000. The slash and burn agriculture eliminated about ten percent of
the total countrys native biomass and converted it to a barren wasteland. These effects were from
overpopulation and the necessity to feed poor indigenous peoples, but the adverse effects included widespread
gully erosion that in turn produced heavily silted rivers that run red decades after the deforestation. This
eliminated a large amount of usable fresh water and also destroyed much of the riverine ecosystems of several
large west-flowing rivers. Several fish species have been driven to the edge of extinction and some coral reef
formations in the Indian Ocean are effectively lost.
In October 2008, Peter Brabeck-Letmathe, chairman and former chief executive of Nestl, warned that the
production of biofuels will further deplete the world's water supply.