Running out of water is one of the biggest risks facing the world. What can we do about it?

Running out of water is one of the biggest risks facing the world. What can we do about it?

“Life is not possible without water,” Tim Wainwright CEO of international NGO WaterAid tells Euronews Green.

“To be resilient to climate change, any community must have a sustainable source of water.”

The significance of climate change is highlighted in both the World Economic Forum’s top 10 risks for the next two years and its top 10 risks for the next 10 years. They range from natural disasters and extreme weather events to biodiversity loss and ecosystem collapse. 

Half of them have water as an underpinning issue, according to Wainwright.

We’re not doing enough to adapt to climate change

At international meetings like Davos, there is often a lot of focus of reducing greenhouse gas emissions but not as much on learning to live with climate change.

“When I come here, I’m always slightly frustrated because although it’s incredibly important to slow down climate change, we’re not doing enough to live with it, to adapt to it,” Wainwright adds.

WaterAid works in some of the poorest communities in the world, where the impact of climate change is being felt the most. He says we have recently seen just how big of an issue water is with last year’s devastating flooding in Pakistan and droughts in East Africa.

Homes are surrounded by floodwaters in Sohbat Pur city, a district of Pakistan’s southwestern Baluchistan province in August, 2022.AP Photo/Zahid Hussain, File

These communities that have done the least to cause climate change are being hit the hardest.

But there are plenty of opportunities to invest in ensuring that they can cope. Groundwater – water reserves found underground in rock and soil – is just one.

“There are parts of the world that have huge problems with groundwater, especially in South Asia. There are other parts of the world, like Africa, where there are enormous aquifers,” Wainwright explains.

These underground water reserves are not currently being used but could provide five years – or in some cases up to 20 years – of protection against drought. What is needed is action to map where this groundwater is, drill sustainable wells and maintain water systems.

Money is vital for climate change resilience

Wainwright says that every day people write to him with new ideas of how to take water out of the air or new approaches to desalination.

“They’re occasionally useful but most of the time with water, there’s a chronic lack of investment and the other things you need to have around it [like] good political will and regulation to make it happen,” he explains.

What would be really useful, Wainwright says, is more innovative sources of finance. Currently, just 9 per cent of investment in water in developing countries comes from the private sector.

In the energy sector, that figure is 45 per cent.

“The levels of investment required to make the world resilient to climate change in the water area are in the trillions. So the only place that money is going to come from is the private sector.”

To get the best out of meetings like Davos, the CEO of WaterAid concludes, deep conversations need to be had. And those conversations need to be turned into real action.

Watch the video above to learn more about water and climate change.

Video editor • Hannah Brown

Additional sources • AFP & Canva

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