"With an average annual rainfall of 1,170 mm, India is one of the wettest countries in the world. Still, even with its rich natural water resources, with more than 300,000 square meters of bodies of water, the country is plagued by environmental issues such as water pollution from raw sewage and runoff of agricultural pesticides (Sharma, 2005). Another major problem is that tap water is not potable throughout the country. This implies that people, especially those from the lower income bracket, cannot avail of clean drinking water, since these have to be bought. Repugnant as it may sound, it is a reality that millions of Indians queue up everyday at public taps for one of life's most precious commodity — water." -ADB

Tuesday 3 November 2009

Climate Change, Environment, and Natural Resources Management - The Climate Change, Environment, and Natural Resources Management

Climate Change, Environment, and Natural Resources Management - The Climate Change, Environment, and Natural Resources Management




One-third of the world’s population face water scarcity; 70 percent of the world’s fisheries are depleted or overexploited; soil degradation affects 30 percent of the world’s irrigated lands, 40 percent of rain-fed agricultural lands, and 70 percent of rangelands and every year 1.0 million people die prematurely from respiratory illnesses associated with air pollution.

Likewise, a delay in reducing green house gas (GHG) emissions is likely to significantly constrain opportunities to achieve lower stabilization levels and increase the risk of more severe and irreversible impacts.

Numerous other examples exist of natural resource depletion and worsening environmental quality that disproportionately affects the poor and compromises sustained gains in well being for this and future generations.

The environment, development and institutions are fundamentally interrelated, within a general context of sustainable development. Overuse, mismanagement, and contamination of natural resources are often the negative unforeseen consequences of development efforts characterized by unclear property rights, perverse economic incentives, poor governance, and badly designed production processes. A degraded environment stalls development, exacerbates social conflict, and undermines poverty reduction efforts and growth. These impacts are more acute where livelihoods directly rely on the services of natural assets

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Disclaimer: This Blog is a small step towards building a knowledge-based platform for Professionals interested in "water resources management(WRM)". One of the objective is knowledge dissemination. Please note that VIEWs expressed here are purely personal.