Fresh water scarcity: An introduction to the problem - Christiana Z. Peppard

611,592 views ・ 2013-02-14

TED-Ed


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Transcriber: Andrea McDonough Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar
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You might have heard that we're running out of fresh water.
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This might sound strange to you because,
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if you live in a place where water flows freely
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from the tap or shower at any time,
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it sure doesn't seem like a big deal.
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It's just there, right?
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Wrong!
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The only obvious thing about fresh water
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is how much we need it.
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Because it's essential to life,
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we need to think about it carefully.
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Right now, at this very moment, some people,
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women and girls in particular,
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walk hours and miles per day to get fresh water,
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and even then, it may not be clean.
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Every 15 seconds, a child dies due to water-born diseases.
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This is tragic!
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The most compelling reasons to think about fresh water,
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therefore, have to do with what we might call
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the global common good.
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This is not something we normally think about,
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but it means recognizing how much fresh water matters
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for the flourishing of human and non-human life on Earth
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now and in the future.
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How do we think about something
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as local as our faucets
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and as global as fresh water?
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Is there a connection between them?
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Many people assume that fresh water shortages
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are due to individual wastefulness:
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running the water while you brush your teeth, for example,
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or taking really long showers.
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Most of us assume, therefore,
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that water shortages can be fixed
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by improving our personal habits:
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taking shorter showers
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or turning off the water while we brush our teeth.
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But, global fresh water scarcity
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neither starts nor ends in your shower.
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Globally, domestic use of fresh water
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accounts for only 8% of consumption,
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8%!!
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Compare that to the 70% that goes to agriculture
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and the 22% that goes to industrial uses.
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Now, hold up - you're not off the hook!
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Individual habits are still part of the puzzle.
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You should still cultivate water virtue in your daily life,
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turn off the tap when you brush your teeth.
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But still, it's true.
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Taking shorter showers won't solve global problems,
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which is too bad.
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It would be much more straightforward and easier
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if virtuous, individual actions could do the trick.
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You'd just stand there for 30 seconds less,
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and you'd be done with that irksome,
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planet-saving task for the day.
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Well, that's not so much the case.
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Agricultural and industrial patterns of water use
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need serious attention.
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How do our societies value water?
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Distribute it?
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Subsidize its use in agriculture?
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Incentivize its consumption or pollution?
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These are all questions that stem from
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how we think about fresh water's value.
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Is it an economic commodity?
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A human right?
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A public good?
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Nobel prize winners,
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global water justice activists,
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transnational institutions like the United Nations,
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and even the Catholic Church
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are at work on the issue.
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But, it's tricky, too,
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because the business of water
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became very profitable in the 20th century.
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And profit is not the same thing as the common good.
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We need to figure out
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how to value fresh water as a public good,
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something that's vital for human and non-human life,
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now and in the future.
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Now that's a virtuous, collective task
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that goes far beyond your shower.
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