Water scarcity is acute in Asia and is likely
to worsen at an accelerating speed as the region develops.
Yet,
the level of public awareness and political commitment is too low in the region
to bring about radical changes that are needed to quench its growing thirst,
according to an international water expert.
“At a
casual level, most people would say, ‘Yeah, water is a big problem.’ But if you
talk about the awareness beyond that level, ‘Okay, what to do about it?’ I
think there is almost no discussion going on,” Paul Reiter, executive director
of the International Water Association, told The Korea Herald.
“Asia’s
problems are not original, but the scope and magnitude of them, because of the
rate that the region is developing, make it the most important region for us,”
he said.
Based
in London, the IWA is a global network of water professionals spanning the
continuum between research and practice and covering all facets of the water
cycle.
The
American expert said the combination of a rapid urbanisation, industrialisation
and population growth will pose threats to Asian countries in their management
of water, ranging from stable supply, sanitation, drainage to wastewater
treatment.
He
cited an Asian Development Bank projection that by 2030, Asia will face a 40
per cent deficiency in water for food.
The
looming water crisis, however, doesn’t seem to receive the attention it
deserves, compared to energy issues, Reiter said, which is in part because
water is managed by governments, cities or public firms who are less likely to
speak out.
“The
water crisis is like a slow-moving train that is going to crash. It doesn’t
move so fast that it causes people to get into action,” he said.
He
hoped that a big gathering of global water experts in Busan later this year
could serve as an opportunity to drive the sense of urgency in Asia.
Around
7,000 policymakers, industry specialists and academics from some 130 countries
will gather in Korea’s southern port city in September for the biennial IWA
Water Congress and Exhibition, he said.
“Remember
when people realized that the ozone layer was going to be completely destroyed.
They had to make a big fuss about it to get the awareness up. I think we need
to do something like that now,” he said.
Lee
Sun-young
The
Korea Herald
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