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Water Wars of the Near
Future
A good many prominent people have recently forecast, with a sort of gloomy relish, that wars will one day, probably soon, break out over water. These forecasts come not just from the environmental movement, which has long become accustomed to fits of Malthusian soothsaying, but from officials of so sober an institution as the World Bank. Ismail Serageldin, the bank's vice president for environmental affairs and chairman of the World Water Commission, stated bluntly a few years ago that the wars of the 21st century will be fought over water." Although he was roundly criticized for this opinion, he refused to disavow it and has frequently asserted that water is the most critical issue facing human development. The former UN secretary general Boutros Boutros Ghali said something similar about water wars. So did Jordan's late King Hussein, who had obvious cause to mean it. Egypt has more than once threatened to go to war over diversions of the Nile. There are forecasts that water will in certain critical but arid parts of the world, cost as much per barrel as oil, and within a generation. Water is in crisis in China, in Southeast Asia, in southwest America, in North Africa--indeed, in much of Africa except the Congo, Niger, and Zambezi basins. Even in Europe there are shortages--drought is no longer a word alien to England, where water tables were dropping throughout the early 1990s. In many parts of Europe, downstream towns and cities are beginning to feel the consequences of the careless alteration in age-old hydrological ecosystems, as rivers suddenly rage out of control, wetlands dry up, and contaminants enter the groundwater. Yes, even in Europe there is a crisis in water supply and management, as groundwater tables sink and rivers are reduced to a trickle or increased to a destructive flood. Everywhere you look, there are signs that the global water supply is in peril:
Entrepreneurs in Colorado and other states have run into furious and passionate opposition to their plans to "mine" water; the private control of water resources is more and more an issue. Two decades ago, the Roman Polanski movie "Chinatown" had as its underlying theme the willingness of politicians and developers to murder for the right to bring water to the American southwest -- so valuable a resource did it appear. Since then, there have been several equally celebrated but real-life civil trials involving the crucial question: Who controls supply? The tough question is, are these scary forecasts justified? Is any place that short of water -- and if so, is the only alternative warfare? The possibility that water wars will erupt derives, after all, from a few simple propositions:
If you live in a part of the world that is water scarce, there are really only three strategies you can follow:
In ancient Jewish, Christian, and Islamic traditions, the ultimate source of the waters of life lie beneath that politically potent piece of real estate called Jerusalem--a metaphor for the recognition that the solution to the problems of water is ultimately political. Who owns water? Who processes it? Who controls it? Who wants to steal it? Who can? In transnational water disputes, which is the most dangerous? When the upstream nation is more powerful than the downstream, and therefore more cavalier about taking into account downstream needs? When the downstream nation is more powerful, in which case the upstream nation risks retaliation for any careless handling of the supply? Or when both countries are water stressed and more or less equal in power? The pessimists will say all three are dangerous. Egypt, a powerful downstream riparian, has several times threatened to go to war over Nile water; only the fact that both Sudan and Ethiopia have been wracked by civil war and are too poor to develop "their" water resources has so far prevented conflict. In the Euphrates Basin, Turkey is militarily more potent than Syria, but that hasn't stopped the Syrians from threatening violence. And there are endless examples of powers that are similar in military might, but have threatened war: along the Mekong River, along the Parana, and other places. In the Senegal Valley of West Africa, water shortages contributed to recent violent skirmishes between MaurHania and Senegal, complicated by the ethnic conflict between the black Africans and the paler-skinned Moors who control MaurHania. On the other side of the country, desperate Mauritanians wrecked a Malian village after cattle herders refused to let them cross the border to water their cattle at a well. There are those who think the possibility of water wars overblown. The Canadian security analyst Thomas Homer-Dixon, a name that pops up as a footnote in numberless academic papers, is one of the skeptics. Homer-Dixon's research found virtually no examples of state violence associated with renewable resources like fish, forests, or water, but many associated with non-renewables like oil or iron. He pooh-poohs the alarmists, though he acknowledges that "water supplies are needed for all aspects of national activity, including the production and use of military power, and rich countries are as dependent on water as poor countries are . . . Moreover, about 40 percent of the world's population lives in the 250 river basins shared by more than one country . . . But the story is more complicated than it first appears. Wars over river water between upstream and downstream neighbors are likely only in a narrow set of circumstances. The downstream country must be highly dependent on the water for its national well-being; the upstream country must be able to restrict the river's flow; there must be a history of antagonism between the two countries; and, most important, the downstream country must be militarily much stronger than the upstream country." He found only one case that fit all his criteria: Egypt and the Nile. Not everyone agrees with this analysis, thinking it overly optimistic. Frederick Frey, a political scientist with the University of Pennsylvania, argues that water is different from renewable resources such as fish or wood. "Water has four primary characteristics of political importance: extreme importance, scarcity, maldistribution, and being shared. These make internecine conflict over water more likely than similar conflicts over other resources. Moreover, tendencies towards water conflicts are exacerbated by rampant population growth and water-wasteful economic development. A national and international 'power shortage,' in the sense of an inability to control these two trends, makes the problem even more alarming." Here are the main water hot spots to watch for:
Other areas where water is in critical supply but there the threat of war is much less, include the Parana system, the Colorado system, and much of sub-Saharan Africa. There is another way of looking at the notion of
water conflicts, which Homer-Dixon acknowledges and urges on the world's
policy makers. Water shortages may not lead to shooting wars, but they
most certainly lead to food shortages, increased poverty, and to the
spread of disease. They make people poorer. They increase the migrations
of peoples, further straining the massive megaslums of the developing
world. Standards of living deteriorate, social unrest and violence
increase, leading, as the doomsayer Robert Kaplan put it, to "the coming
anarchy." Bangladesh may never go to war with India--even before the
recent settlement, the Bangladeshis were too poor to do much more than
grumble--but the stress caused by water shortages led to massive
migrations of people, upsetting the ethnic balance of several Bangladeshi
and Indian states, and leading to the rise of terrorist and nascent
revolutionary movements. By other definitions, then--water wars. | ||