Nary
a Drop to Drink
A review of Water:
The Fate of Our Most Precious Resource
by Elizabeth Grossman
The
underlying premise is simple: without water we die. As a Turkish
businessman quoted in Marq de Villiers' impressive book, Water:
The Fate of Our Most Precious Resource,
says, "Millions have lived without love. No one has lived
without water."
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Water:
The Fate of Our Most Precious Resource
By Marq de Villiers
Houghton Mifflin Co., 352 pages, 2000
Wanna
b
|
In
Water, de Villiers, who grew up in South Africa and
lives in Nova Scotia, tours the world to examine the state
of its most vital resource. What he finds is not encouraging.
From Africa to Asia and Australia, from Europe to the Middle
East and the Americas, too many people depend on too little
-- and increasingly limited -- water. Despite Herculean engineering
schemes constructed to water deserts and to store and deliver
water where it would otherwise not be available, demand for
water will almost surely continue to outstrip supply unless
we dramatically alter our behavior.
In
addition to the problems of supply and demand, de Villiers
describes the ecological damage incurred by the use and abuse
of water sources. Through pollution, diversion, and degradation,
industrialization of the world has taken a heavy toll on water
quality. On every continent, rivers have been straightened
to ease navigation, bermed and banked for flood control, dammed
and diverted for irrigation, and used as receptacles for noxious
and toxic waste. To facilitate development, wetlands have
been drained, natural flows and stream channels altered. The
result is a world where most major rivers and lakes no longer
retain their full ecological function. This reality, as de
Villiers explains with many illuminating examples, severely
hampers how water sources replenish and renew themselves.
Now,
with surface water exploited nearly to the maximum extent
possible, countries around the world have begun tapping groundwater
-- the primary water source in areas with little rainfall
and few lakes or rivers. As underground aquifers begin to
be depleted, there is concern about further upsetting the
ecological balance. Diverting water from one river basin to
another -- which, until now, has been largely a matter of
economics and geopolitics, as in Southern California -- quickly
becomes a matter of survival in a developing nation like Namibia,
as over-allotment of water in one area leads to desertification
in another.
Rooting
his narrative in memories of his grandfather's farm in arid
South Africa, de Villiers is fierce about recognizing the
value of clean, uncompromised water. He has done his homework
thoroughly and brings both ecological and historical knowledge
to bear in his frank criticism of how the world's water resources
have been managed. At his bluntest, he says, "Humans consume
water, discard it, poison it, waste it, and restlessly change
the hydrological cycles, indifferent to the consequences:
too many people, too little water, water in the wrong places
and in the wrong amount. The human population is burgeoning,
but water demand is increasing twice as fast."
Thanks
to de Villiers's humane tone and nimble curiosity, Water
ends on a progressive note, despite all its sobering and distressing
information. There is much to be learned here, and all would
profit if we began to act on Water's lessons.
__________
Elizabeth
Grossman is coeditor of Shadow
Cat: Encountering the American Mountain Lion.
She writes from Portland, Ore.