WWF-UK: Drinking the oceans is not the solution for a thirsty world

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Drinking the oceans is not the solution for a thirsty world

Tuesday 19 June 2007
Making drinking water out of sea water is a growing trend but a potentially insidious threat to the environment that could also exacerbate climate change, according to WWF's global review of desalination plants.
The review, Making water: Desalination - option or distraction for a thirsty world?, shows that some of the driest and thirstiest places are turning to desalination. These include Australia, the Middle East, Spain, the UK and US, with India and China following suit. These are all regions where water problems affect large, populous areas.

"Desalinating the sea is an expensive, energy-intensive and greenhouse-gas-emitting way to get water," says Jamie Pittock, Director of WWF's Global Freshwater Programme. "It may have a place in the world's future freshwater supplies but regions still have cheaper, better and complementary ways to supply water that are less risky to the environment."

It is estimated that around 60% of freshwater needs in the Arabian Gulf are met through desalination. In Australia, Perth may be looking to source a third of its fresh water the same way. Spain is devoting an astonishing proportion of its desalinated water to agriculture - at 22% the highest level in the world - as well as to holiday resorts in arid areas.

Impacts of desalination include brine build-up, increased greenhouse gas emissions, destruction of prized coastal areas, and reduced emphasis on conservation of rivers and wetlands. Many of the areas of most intensive desalination activity also have a history of damaging natural water resources, particularly groundwater.

It is important to manage water demand and assess impacts of any large-scale engineering solution early in order to avert irreversible damage to nature. Providing sustainable sources of water must start with protecting natural assets such as rivers, floodplains, and wetlands. These natural systems purify and provide water as well as protecting against extreme or catastrophic events.

"Large desalination plants might rapidly become 'the new dams' and obscure the importance of real conservation of rivers and wetlands," adds Pittock. "As with any relatively new engineering, such as large dams that grew up in the 50s, the negatives become known when it is too late or too expensive to fix. What we need most is a new attitude to water, not unchecked expansion of water engineering."
Schoolgirl drinking rainwater; freshwater is a threatened resource ©WWF-Canon / Martin HARVEY

"Desalinating the sea is an expensive, energy-intensive and greenhouse gas emitting way to get water."

Jamie Pittock, Director Freshwater Programme, WWF.


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  • Read the report Desalination - option or distraction for a thirsty world? 4.9Mb


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