Water1

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Water!

Sustainable Agriculture

Karen Mahrous Roa Elbizri Nesmarie Negron Agustina Besada August 2014


Water •  The Problem –  Quantity –  Quality

•  The Solutions –  Management practices –  Technologies –  Regulations/Policy


The Problem: Quantity

Development Needs: Availability Water Availability Per capita by Region

Africa Asia La3n America Europe North America

120 Per Capita *000m3

100 80 60 40 20 0 1950

AGRICULTURE

Source: World Water Development Report 4. World Water Assessment Programme (WWAP), March 2012

WATER CRISIS

1960

1970

1980

2000

AGRICULTURE CRISIS

Graph created with informa3on from source: N.B. Ayibotele. 1992. The world's water: assessing the resource. Keynote paper at the ICWE, Dublin, Ireland.


The Problem: Quantity

ESG Risks

Drought

New Systems

Supply

Demand

Flood

Crop Requirements


The Problem: Quantity

Market

55%

increase in global water

demand in 2050


The Problem: Quality

Sources of Water Pollutants


The Problem: Quality

Gulf of Mexico Dead Zone


The Problem: Quality

Water Contamination by Nitrates

Source: United Na?ons Water Quality


The Problem: Quality

Agricultural Pollutants Pollutant

Key water quality issue related to pollutant

Main agricultural ac?vi?es that are the source of the pollutant

Nutrients mainly nitrates and phosphates

Eutrophica3on and impairment of drinking water mainly harmful to aqua3c life, but also human heath in some cases

Agricultural produc3on (runoff of excess nitrates and phosphates from fer3lizers and animal manure into water)

Toxic contaminants Harmful to aqua3c life and impairs (largely heavy drinking water (contamina3on of water) metals pes3cides)

Spreading sewage sludge on agricultural land (heavy metals) and plant protec3on (pes3cides)

Soil sediments

Harmful to aqua3c life and water transport systems (turbidity of water)

Inappropriate soil conserva3on prac3ces (wind and water soil erosion)

Organic maaer

Harmful to aqua3c life (deoxygena3on of Manure-­‐spreading on livestock farms water)

Acid substances

Harmful to aqua3c life (acidifica3on of water)

Livestock produc3on (ammonia vola3lisa3on)

Biological contaminants

Impairs drinking water (pathogenic bacteria and viruses) and bathing water

Faecal discharge from livestock into water

Mineral salts

Impairs drinking water, the use of water for irrigua3on, and aqua3c life (salinisa3on of water)

Inappropriate land use (cleaning of parennial vegeta3on and irriga3on prac3ces)

Source: OECD, “Agriculture and Water Quality: Sources, Trends, Outlook and Monitoring” 2012


The Solutions:

The IWRM Solution


The Solutions -­‐ Boycots -­‐ Media campaigns

Farm Level

Consumer Level

-­‐ Biological farming -­‐ Irriga3on and cul3va3on technologies

Water Quan3ty and Quality -­‐ Pollu3on charges -­‐ Water quality trading

Market Level

Basin Level Gov. Level -­‐ Technical outreach and training -­‐ Financial incen3ves

-­‐ Contour farming -­‐ Terracing


The Solutions: Policy

Water Quality Policy and Regulations Trends in the U.S. Agri-­‐environmental Conserva3on Payments (1985-­‐2012)

Farmer Awareness

Holis3c

Data Deficiencies

Improving Science and Knowledge

Pollu3on Time Lags


The Solutions: Policy

Water Quantity Policy and Regulations

Quan3ty Regula3on

Price Regula3on

Transferable Permits

Conserva3on Subsidies


Thank you.


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