New water management drive launched at WFES
Abu Dhabi, January 20, 2014
The World Bank is launching a new initiative at the World Future Energy Summit (WFES) and International Water Summit in Abu Dhabi to help developing countries better manage energy capacity in tandem with water resource management.
By 2035, the world’s energy consumption will increase by 35 per cent, which in turn will increase water consumption by 85 per cent, according to the International Energy Agency.
“The world’s energy and water are inextricably linked. With demand rising for both resources and increasing challenges from climate change, water scarcity can threaten the long-term viability of energy projects and hinder development,” said Rachel Kyte, World Bank Group vice president and special envoy for Climate Change.
Part of the challenge for the energy sector is the competing demand for water. This demand will grow as the world’s population reaches 9 billion, requiring a 50 per cent increase in agricultural production and a 15 per cent increase in already-strained water withdrawals.
With two-thirds of the world’s population - or 5 billion people - urbanized by 2030, cities in developing countries will be under tremendous pressure to meet the demand for food, energy, and water services. Yet today, some 780 million people lack access to improved water and 2.5 billion, more than one-third of the world's people, do not have basic sanitation.
Thirsty Energy is a global initiative aimed to help governments prepare for an uncertain future by identifying synergies and quantifying tradeoffs between energy development plans and water use, piloting cross-sectoral planning to ensure sustainability of energy and water investments and designing assessment tools and management frameworks to help governments coordinate decision-making
“Water constraints on the energy sector can be overcome, but all stakeholders, public and private, must work together to develop innovative tools and use water as a guiding factor for assessing viability of projects,” said Maria van der Hoeven, executive director of the International Energy Agency. “The absence of integrated planning is unsustainable.”
Solutions exist, but countries must continue to innovate and adapt policies and technology to address the complexity of the landscape. These solutions include technological development and adoption, improved operations to reduce water use and impacts in water quality, and strong integrated planning.
“We cannot meet our global energy goals of extending access to the poor, increasing efficiency and expanding renewables without water. The water energy interrelationship is critical to build resilient as well as efficient, clean energy systems. The time to act is now,” said Kyte. – TradeArabia News Service