India’s suspension
of the Indus Water Commission meeting on 26 September 2016, and its convening
of a meeting to review India’s options for modifying or walking away from the
Indus Water Treaty, was immediately met with sharp retorts from political
leaders in Pakistan, who suggested that any Indian attempt to renege from the
Treaty would be deemed an act of war.
This potential global
catastrophe looms in Asia as rapidly rising water demand collides with a
diminishing resource on which at least 300 million people depend directly,
warns a new book from United Nations University’s Canada-based Institute for
Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH).
The book, “Imagining
Industan,” appeals to the three nuclear armed powers sharing the Indus River
basin — India, Pakistan and China — and Afghanistan to begin working together
as never before to manage the precious resource.
Its editors describe
the book as an effort “to kindle serious discussion of the trans-boundary
cooperation needed to confront what more and more water experts believe is
developing into one of the planet’s most gravely threatened river basins.”
The book’s 14
contributing experts acknowledge the immensity of the challenges in a region
prone to political and military conflict but say “much greater collective planning
is essential…if the Indus basin is to escape the likely disastrous consequences
of continued failure to collaborate.”
Published by Springer,
the 216-page work is the culmination of a project supported by UNU-INWEH and
proposes a new course for the 1,120,000 km2 basin drained by the Indus River,
six major tributaries and connected waterways covering over 65% of Pakistan, a
significant part of India (14%) and smaller areas of Afghanistan (11%) and
China (1%).
Zafar Adeel, Executive
Director of the Pacific Water Research Centre at Simon Fraser University,
Canada, co-edited the work with Robert G. Wirsing, recently retired Professor
of Government at Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service in Doha,
Qatar.
Most of the Indus
waters flow from glaciers and melting snow high in the Himalayan Mountains and
the Tibetan Plateau. Pakistan and India have, until now, been by far its
biggest consumers — mainly for irrigation and generating hydroelectric energy —
through one of the most extensive system of dams and canals that originated
with British engineers during the colonial period.
Mushrooming water
demand has led to pollution, shortages and conflict in those countries, and
rapid population and economic growth adds to these problems. Disputes over
water have fuelled conflicts within and between the riparian nations, and that
history of conflict, in turn, increases the difficulty of achieving amicable
and sustainable solutions.
The situation will
only worsen as climate change threatens the resource and China and Afghanistan
divert more of it for their own uses. Numerous new dams are planned or under
construction in all four countries. “Industan” is a play on words to emphasize
the need to think of the basin as a single, integrated resource.
The basin “lies in a
part of the world where intense distrust, chronic conflict, and bitterly
contentious water policies have a long history,” the editors say, and Dr.
Wirsing admits that “the subject of this book might seem imprudently
optimistic.” However, “it was not really optimism that drove the project to
completion but a combination of the available opportunities and what might
happen if they are not availed.”
The consensus of all
the book’s contributors: “Further delay in tackling collectively the region’s
widely shared and massive problem of water insecurity probably risked
intensifying already considerable tensions among the four states sharing the
basin.”
Water shortages could
lead to economic distress and internal political instability, particularly in
Pakistan, whose freshwater withdrawal at 183 billion m3 per year is the world’s
fourth highest rate of water use behind India, China, and the United States.
Making matters worse,
the Indus basin is widely expected to be among the world’s worst-affected from
climate change, leading to drought, desertification, less predictable monsoon
rains, weather turbulence, flooding, sea level rise, and glacial retreat — all
with “potentially harmful collective economic and political consequences.”
Co-operation could
start with sharing data, which would not only increase understanding of the
resource but raise the level of trust among the four nations. Cooperation is
possible also on specific areas of concern, such as dealing with the impacts of
climate change, the sharing of hydropower energy, and collective responses to
water-related natural disasters.
Says UNU-INWEH
Director Vladimir Smakhtin: “The book is an important contribution to creating
the awareness of the existing and emerging water-related conflicts in the
world, and a loud call for immediate strengthening of transboundary cooperation
– to increase both water security and overall regional security. The Indus
river basin may be seen as a water time bomb, which may go off any time with
increasing water scarcity, variability and progressively changing climate.
There are similar water-related accumulating tensions and issues in other major
river basins and UNU-INWEH has embarked on the scrupulous analysis of those to
ensure peaceful and sustainable trajectory of river basin developments.”
Summary of key messages, Imagining Industan:
- Integrated and basin-wide cooperative management
of the Indus basin is essential for contemporary water planners, who could
draw lessons from the history of cohesive water management and planning before
the partition of India and Pakistan.
- Water cooperation among the riparian nations must
work uphill against a myriad of diverse, complex, and frustrating
handicaps such as the basin’s geography, geo-political interests, and
securitization of water.
- Implementation of many cooperative instruments is
quite feasible, working within the existing legal and regional cooperation
frameworks; these include international conventions, bilateral treaties,
regional cooperation organizations, and research and development
organizations with a regional mandate.
- The Indus Water Treaty must go beyond its current
state-centric, zero-sum approach, and aim towards a more resilient future
of the basin; re-imagining IWT could include amending the Treaty to
reflect contemporary issues (e.g., climate change, water quality, energy
sharing, etc.) and ground realities in the four riparian nations, or
breathing more life into its mostly-neglected Article VII on cooperation.
- New and emerging threats as a result of climate
change and new satellite-based technologies offer the possibility to
collaborate on data sharing and developing jointly-managed disaster
response systems.
- The international community, particularly
development partners, should play a constructive role in mobilizing financial
assistance and resources to build basin-wide hydro-diplomacy initiatives;
new international development frameworks offered through the 2030 Agenda
for Sustainable Development and the 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change
offer excellent entry points.
- The price of non-cooperation and persistent
mistrust is very steep, with adverse impacts potentially harming people
and economies in all riparian states.
There is always some kind of nuclear threat hanging over our heads. But how any of us know that the entire Cold War was a hoax intended to enrich the arms industry? When school kids were being taught to hide under their desks from an atomic blast in the early 60s, the Soviets actually had zero ICBM military capability. i.e. we were hoaxed. How much of today's nuclear threat is real?
ReplyDeleteThe $5 Trillion Cold War Hoax by Eustace Mullins
www.whale.to/b/mullins6.html