India has access to only 4% of the world’s water reserves

 
Bookmark 
           and Share
09 February 2010
 

Water problems might not be the highlighting points of the climate change discussions but their due importance towards economic growth and sustainability has been realised. India feeds about 17% of the world’s population but has access to only 4% of water reserves. This calls for an urgent need towards the set up of an appropriate water management system.

Water may not be the point of entry into the debate on climate change but that it is at the heart of the issue was widely accepted at the World CEO Forum held during the Delhi Sustainable Development Summit 2010.

Acknowledging the subject as an important part of climate change, Water Resources minister P K Bansal said, “The reducing per capita availability of water and the poor maintenance of existing facilities are just some of the concerns we are faced with in the Indian region.”

Launching the Regional Knowledge Hub for Water and Climate Change Adaptation in South Asia at The Energy and Research Institute (TERI), Bansal emphasised the centrality of water to economic growth and life. Voicing concern about depleting water reserves and emphasising the urgency of efficiency in water management, Bansal added that while India fed 17% of the world’s population, it had access to only 4% of the world’s water reserves.

While Bansal took up cause of water management in India and its neighbouring regions, other issues discussed at the CEO forum ranged from creating a vision document for sustainable development and pushing the agenda of building a green economy.

Source: The Times of India

 

Grassroots | Global | Newsfeed | Knowledge | Resources