Caspar Hewett writes:
The BBC warns that climate change could cause ‘water shortages in
England “within 25 years”’.
The Daily Mail is even more sensational, warning that England could
‘run out of water by 2044’. ‘Experts fear rise in heatwave summers means UK
faces “jaws of death” in 25 years, when demand from rising population outstrips
supply’, it reports.
These claims were based on remarks by Sir James Bevan,
chief executive of the Environment Agency. Bevan highlighted two potential
pressures on water availability over the next 25 years: climate change and an
increase in population.
He rightly pointed out that a variety of measures
should be undertaken to ensure that we do not reach a water-supply crisis,
including serious investment in dealing with pipe leakage and, more importantly,
investment in major infrastructure projects like reservoirs and desalination
plants.
Disappointingly, the mainstream press emphasised the more
sensational aspects of Bevan’s comments: that we are on the verge of a crisis
(which of course makes for good headlines) and that individuals need to cut
down their water use.
This is partly Bevan’s fault. He has called on households
to reduce their water usage from 140 litres per day to 100.
The Guardian quotes
him as saying, ‘We need water wastage to be as socially unacceptable as blowing
smoke in the face of a baby or throwing your plastic bags into the sea’.
The
BBC’s report includes Bevan’s tips for reducing water use at home, such as
taking showers instead of baths and turning off the tap while brushing your
teeth.
Individual
households are not responsible for potential water shortages. The problems we
face arise from an unforgivable lack of investment in water infrastructure that
goes back decades.
The last large reservoir to be built in the UK
was Kielder Water, which was completed in 1982.
Kielder Water is northern
Europe’s largest manmade lake. It holds 200 billion litres of water and
provides good-quality water to north-east England.
Since its completion, every
proposal for a new large reservoir has failed to move forward following
resistance from the environmental lobby and the NIMBY brigade.
Take the case of Thames Water’s proposed
mega-reservoir near Abingdon in Oxfordshire. First proposed in 2006, the plans
met huge resistance from day one. The arguments still rage on, over a decade
later.
One of the main arguments made against it is that Thames
Water (and other water companies) should first do something about the huge
amount of water lost to leaks.
Of course, there is nothing wrong with improving
the existing infrastructure to reduce waste. But we still need to invest in new
infrastructure to future proof supply.
The calls to fix leaks or reduce household usage
reflect how public policy around resources like water or electricity has been
influenced by the ‘demand-management paradigm’ over the past decades.
Where, in
the past, the aim of policies was to create enough supply to meet demand – or
‘supply management’ – officials now argue that we should move to ‘demand
management’, which aims to reduce demand in line with a limited supply.
This approach is ridiculous when it comes to water. Water
is the one resource on Earth that can never run out. It is infinitely
recyclable. It even recycles itself through the hydrological cycle: water
evaporates and falls back to Earth.
In the UK, where we have a temperate
climate and high rainfall, all we need to do is catch the rain and store it in
the right places. Infrastructure is the key.
To store and supply water,
we need reservoirs of all scales, a complete overhaul of the pipe network, and
a willingness to consider desalination at selected locations. We should reject
the demand-management approach and return to managing supply.
It is ludicrous that a water-rich country like
the UK should be predicting water shortages. It shows a real lack of vision and
an unwillingness to invest in the future.
There is no reason not to take the
necessary steps to guarantee a plentiful supply of water for the next century
and beyond.
There should be a National Grid for water. Another hung Parliament is coming, and we need our people to hold the balance of power in it.
There should be a National Grid for water. Another hung Parliament is coming, and we need our people to hold the balance of power in it.
It has become a local commonplace that I am on 30-30-30 with Labour and the Conservatives here at North West Durham, so that any one of us could be the First Past the Post.
I will stand for this seat, if I can raise the £10,000 necessary to mount a serious campaign. Please email davidaslindsay@hotmail.com. Very many thanks.
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