On Saturday, March 22, World
Water Day, the first United Nations World Water Development Report
Water for people – Water for life will be presented. The
report offers an up-to-date comprehensive assessment of the state of
the world’s freshwater resources, based on the collective inputs of
23 United Nations agencies.
A group of researchers, led by Slobodan P. Simonovic,
Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering and Research
Chair, Institute for Catastrophic Loss Reduction (ICLR) at The
University of Western Ontario, prepared a section of the report on
water related conflicts.
"The 21st Century is the water century," says
Simonovic. "Hope for the future lies in co-operative
international action directed to counter numerous water problems
exaggerated by the climate variability and change. Canada has more
water than most nations. However, changes in water availability in
terms of quantity and quality greatly affect Canadian life. Canada
and the world need to take action now and invest in waste water
treatment."
Simonovic’s research on a world water model and a Canadian water
model makes us consider:
- 1.1 billion people lack access to safe water and 2.4 billion
lack access to adequate sanitation
- More than 6,000 children die every day from diseases
associated with unsafe water
- Unsafe water and sanitation cause an estimated 80 per cent of
all diseases in the developing world
- One flush of a Western toilet uses as much water as the
average person in the developing world uses for a whole day’s
washing, drinking, cleaning and cooking
- Water use has grown at twice the rate of population during the
past century
- In developing countries, as much as 90 per cent of waste water
is discharged without the treatment
- Floods affected more than 75 per cent of all people impacted
by natural disasters during the 1990’s and caused 33 per cent of
the total estimated costs of natural disasters
- Great Lakes levels are fluctuating to such a degree that daily
surveillance has been necessary
- Drinking water is of major concern (26 per cent of Canadians
rely on groundwater for domestic use, which, if contaminated,
poses difficult cleanup problems)
- 60 per cent of Canada’s fresh water drains north, while 90 per
cent of the population lives within 300 km of the Canada-United
States border
- In order to deal with temporal and spatial variability in
water supply Canada has built more than 600 large dams and about
60 large domestic interbasin diversions
Simonovic is an expert on complex water and environmental
systems. His work is related to the integration of risk,
reliability, uncertainty, simulation and optimization in hydrology
and water resources management. His recent work focuses on flood
prevention and management. Recently named the National Lecture Tour
speaker by the Canadian Water Resources Association, Simonovic will
be delivering lectures this summer to the general public and water
professionals across Canada.
The World Water Forum currently underway in Kyoto, Japan, has
brought more than 10,000 government officials, representatives of
international and non-governmental organizations, and industry and
water experts together to discuss the world water crisis and its
solutions. The United Nations General Assembly proclaimed 2003 as
the International Year of Freshwater, recognizing the importance of
water to the planet’s future.
Simonovic can be reached for comment at (519) 661-4271 (ICLR), or
(519) 661-4075 (office) or (519) 474-4880 (home).
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Media contact:
Alison Liversage
Communications & Public
Affairs
(519) 661-2111 ext. 85165
aliversa@uwo.ca
Note to broadcasters: Western has a VideoRoute service and can
arrange live broadcast interviews. Please call (519) 661-2111 ext.
85165 for more information.
Commentary reflects the perspective and scholarly interests of
Western faculty members and is not an articulation of official
university policy on issues being addressed.