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

Transcriber: Andrea McDonough
Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar

You might have heard that we’re running out of fresh water.

This might sound strange to you because,

if you live in a place where water flows freely

from the tap or shower at any time,

it sure doesn’t seem like a big deal.

It’s just there, right?

Wrong!

The only obvious thing about fresh water

is how much we need it.

Because it’s essential to life,

we need to think about it carefully.

Right now, at this very moment, some people,

women and girls in particular,

walk hours and miles per day to get fresh water,

and even then, it may not be clean.

Every 15 seconds, a child dies due to water-born diseases.

This is tragic!

The most compelling reasons to think about fresh water,

therefore, have to do with what we might call

the global common good.

This is not something we normally think about,

but it means recognizing how much fresh water matters

for the flourishing of human and non-human life on Earth

now and in the future.

How do we think about something

as local as our faucets

and as global as fresh water?

Is there a connection between them?

Many people assume that fresh water shortages

are due to individual wastefulness:

running the water while you brush your teeth, for example,

or taking really long showers.

Most of us assume, therefore,

that water shortages can be fixed

by improving our personal habits:

taking shorter showers

or turning off the water while we brush our teeth.

But, global fresh water scarcity

neither starts nor ends in your shower.

Globally, domestic use of fresh water

accounts for only 8% of consumption,

8%!!

Compare that to the 70% that goes to agriculture

and the 22% that goes to industrial uses.

Now, hold up - you’re not off the hook!

Individual habits are still part of the puzzle.

You should still cultivate water virtue in your daily life,

turn off the tap when you brush your teeth.

But still, it’s true.

Taking shorter showers won’t solve global problems,

which is too bad.

It would be much more straightforward and easier

if virtuous, individual actions could do the trick.

You’d just stand there for 30 seconds less,

and you’d be done with that irksome,

planet-saving task for the day.

Well, that’s not so much the case.

Agricultural and industrial patterns of water use

need serious attention.

How do our societies value water?

Distribute it?

Subsidize its use in agriculture?

Incentivize its consumption or pollution?

These are all questions that stem from

how we think about fresh water’s value.

Is it an economic commodity?

A human right?

A public good?

Nobel prize winners,

global water justice activists,

transnational institutions like the United Nations,

and even the Catholic Church

are at work on the issue.

But, it’s tricky, too,

because the business of water

became very profitable in the 20th century.

And profit is not the same thing as the common good.

We need to figure out

how to value fresh water as a public good,

something that’s vital for human and non-human life,

now and in the future.

Now that’s a virtuous, collective task

that goes far beyond your shower.

抄写员:Andrea McDonough
审稿人:Bedirhan Cinar

您可能听说我们的淡水用完了。

这对你来说可能听起来很奇怪,因为

如果你住在一个水

随时从水龙头或淋浴间自由流出的地方,

那肯定没什么大不了的。

它就在那里,对吧?

错误的!

关于淡水的唯一明显的事情

是我们需要多少。

因为它对生活至关重要,所以

我们需要仔细考虑。

现在,此时此刻,有些人,

尤其是妇女和女孩,

每天要步行数小时和数英里才能获得淡水

,即使那样,它也可能不干净。

每 15 秒就有一名儿童死于水媒疾病。

这是悲剧! 因此,

考虑淡水的最令人信服的理由

与我们所谓

的全球共同利益有关。

这不是我们通常会想到的事情,

但这意味着要认识到淡水

对于现在和未来地球上人类和非人类生命的繁荣有多么重要

我们如何看待

像我们的水龙头这样的地方性

和像淡水这样的全球性的东西?

他们之间有联系吗?

许多人认为淡水短缺

是由于个人浪费造成的:

例如,刷牙时流水,

或者淋浴时间过长。

因此,我们大多数人认为,

可以通过改善个人习惯来解决缺水问题

:缩短淋浴时间

或在刷牙时关掉水。

但是,全球淡水稀缺

既不是开始也不是结束于您的淋浴。

在全球范围内,家庭使用的淡水

只占消费量的8%,

8%!!

相比之下,70% 用于农业

,22% 用于工业用途。

现在,等一下——你还没有摆脱困境!

个人习惯仍然是难题的一部分。

日常生活中还是要培养水的美德,

刷牙时关掉水龙头。

但是,这是真的。

缩短淋浴时间并不能解决全球性问题,

这太糟糕了。

如果有美德的个人行为可以做到这一点,那将更加直接和容易。

你只需少站 30 秒

,就可以完成这一天令人厌烦

的拯救地球的任务。

好吧,情况并非如此。

农业和工业用水模式

需要引起重视。

我们的社会如何评价水?

分发吗?

补贴其在农业中的使用?

激励其消费或污染?

这些都是源于

我们如何看待淡水价值的问题。

它是一种经济商品吗?

人权?

公益?

诺贝尔奖获得者、

全球水正义活动家、

联合国等跨国机构,

甚至天主教会

都在努力解决这个问题。

但是,这也很棘手,

因为水业务

在 20 世纪变得非常有利可图。

利润与共同利益不是一回事。

我们需要弄清楚

如何将淡水视为一种公共产品

,这对现在和未来的人类和非人类生命都至关重要

现在,这是一项远远超出淋浴范围的有道德的集体任务