|
The World's Water: 2002-2003 Offers "Soft Path"
Solution to Global Water Crisis
The World's Water 2002-2003 offers a snapshot of our progress
in addressing the global water crisis. It is the third in a series
of books authored by the Dr. Peter H. Gleick and the Pacific Institute.
This book is an effort to explore, understand, and solve a variety
of critical water issues that include the global water crisis,
global warming and water, privatization and globalization of water,
and water-related conflicts.
The central thrust of The World's Water 2002-2003 is that we
must rethink the way we capture, distribute, and use water if
we are to meet the challenges of increasing scarcity and growing
populations. In the lead chapter, the Pacific Institute's director,
Peter H. Gleick, spells out one possible solution to the growing
water crisis: a "soft path" for water.
The "soft path" for water, which borrows both its name
and many concepts from Amory Lovins' work on the soft path for
energy, provides for the needs of people and the natural world
by asking policy makers to rethink how, and what, we use water
for. The chapter's central insight is that people don't so much
want to "use" water as to accomplish certain tasks -
they want to drink and bathe, produce goods and services, grow
food and otherwise meet human needs.
Other chapters cover the increasingly contentious debates over
globalization and privatization of water, new measures of water
well-being, the risks of climate change, and new information on
dams and water. The book also includes several water briefs on
issues including the search for water in outer space, an expanded
historical chronology of conflicts over water, and over 20 newly
update tables on everything from sanitation to irrigation.
The World's Water 2002-2003: The Biennial Report on Freshwater
Resources (Island Press, July 23 2002, Paper $32.50) was
written by Peter H. Gleick with William C.G. Burns, Elizabeth
L. Chalecki, Michael Cohen, Katherine Kao Cushing, Amar
S. Mann, Rachel Reyes, Gary H. Wolff, Arlene K. Wong.
|