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March 20,
2006
Greetings,
Here is an
important Associated Press story today regarding
worldwide water issues and agriculture.
World's Water
Problems, and Solutions, Can Be Found on the
Farm
March 20, 2006 —
By Mark Stevenson, Associated Press
MEXICO CITY
— Eliminating water waste and mismanagement on
farms -- rather than building dams or diverting
rivers -- would go far toward alleviating the
world's water crisis, officials and activists
gathered at an international forum here said.
Farming accounts for 70 percent of the water
consumed and a majority of its waste, said
representatives of some of the 130 nations
attending on Saturday the 4th World
Water Forum to discuss water management
around the globe.
Mismanagement of resources leads to a lack of
safe drinking water for one-fifth of the world's
population, the United Nations said in a report.
In the developing world, the water
crisis is almost totally defined in relation to
agriculture, with constant images of
drought-blasted fields, withered corn stalks and
skinny cattle.
With 525 million small farms in the world,
farmers suffer the most from each problem
discussed at the forum: poverty, disease, and
the lack of sanitation and clean water.
"Farmers are central to the whole picture," said
Patrick McCully, executive director of
International River Network. "They use the
majority of the world's water, and farmers are
where most of the world's poverty is
concentrated."
With 2.5 billion people living off the land,
change is a daunting task.
"There are great problems with irrigation. We
must convince our farmers to go to less
extensive crops," said Michel Rocard the former
prime minister of France. "It's a question of
changing the whole agricultural method."
Traditionally, governments have responded to the
problems of small-scale farmers -- defined as
those with plots of 2 hectares (5 acres) or less
-- by building big dam projects.
But McCully says most small farms are so high up
in the hills or removed from rivers that they
can't benefit from them.
Meanwhile, irrigation systems urgently need
attention, according to Ute Collier, of the
World Wildlife Fund.
"We can't afford to waste water in irrigation
systems that are 30 to 40 percent efficient," he
said. "If we could get that part of the equation
done, we could probably cut down the number of
dams we're building by half, at least."
Greater efficiency would free up money to help
provide clean drinking water and food to small
farmers who, despite raising food, constitute
most of the 842 million people in the world who
go hungry.
Participants in this forum have pledged to focus
on the world's poor, many of whom live on less
than 2 1/2 gallons of water per day --
one-thirtieth of the daily usage in some
developed nations.
Collier's work has focused on improving
irrigation for notoriously thirsty cash crops,
like cotton and sugarcane, although they are
seldom grown on the smallest farms.
Agriculture based on fields that
temporarily flood is also a major problem
because most of that water is wasted through
evaporation. Added to these woes are pesticide
and herbicide runoff from farm fields that
pollute rivers and lakes, as well as soil
erosion and salt buildup from irrigation.
In Mexico, host of the international forum, farm
water disputes are the among the most sensitive
issues in U.S.-Mexico relations.
In 2004, farmers in Texas were outraged when
Mexico failed to let flow 1.3 million acre-feet
of water into a border river under the terms of
a 1944 treaty. An acre-foot is enough water to
flood an acre ( 0.4 hectares) of land under 12
inches (30.5 centimeters) of water.
The long-standing Rio Grande water debt was paid
in full by Mexico in 2005 after heavy rains
replenished reservoirs.
Agriculture cannot be ignored in the water
equation, according to Gerald Galloway, a civil
engineering professor and visiting scholar with
the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
"It is an important part of the U.S. economy,
and it's even more important in the developing
world," he said. "You have to be able to provide
water for agriculture."
Source: Associated Press
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percent of the world's 525 million small farmers
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Cheers,
Ron Castle
North American Business Development
EcoCover Developments Limited
Tennessee USA Office
Phone 931 967 2053
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