Tuesday, March 20, 2007
Major rivers, including the Indus, in danger of drying out: WWF
GENEVA: Many major rivers in the world, including the River Indus, are at risk of drying out because of climate change and dam construction, which could affect fresh water supplies and marine life, the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) said on Tuesday.
In a report ahead of the March 22 ââ¬ËWorld Water Dayââ¬â¢, the Swiss-based group identified 10 rivers, including the Nile, the Rio Grande and the Danube, as some of the worst victims of poor planning and inadequate protection.
ââ¬ÅRivers regularly no longer reach the sea, like the Indus in Pakistan, the Nile in Africa and the Rio Grande ... There are millions of people whose livelihoods are at risk,ââ¬Â said Jamie Pittock, director of WWFââ¬â¢s global freshwater programme.
Rivers are the worldââ¬â¢s main source of fresh water, and about half of the available supply is already being used up, he said.
Dams have destroyed habitats and cut rivers off from their flood plains, while climate change could alter the rules by which rivers have lived by for thousands of years, the report said.
Fish populations, the top source of protein and overall life support for hundreds of thousands of communities worldwide, are also being threatened, the report stated.
WWF urged governments to strike agreements on ways to better manage shared water resources in order to minimise damage. ââ¬ÅAll the rivers in the report symbolise the freshwater crisis signalled for years, but the alarm is falling on deaf ears,ââ¬Â Pittock said.
Other rivers on the warning list were the Yangtze, Mekong, Salween and Ganges, in Asia, the Rio Plata in South America and Australiaââ¬â¢s Murray-Darling, WWF said.
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2007\03\20\story_20-3-2007_pg7_27
Major rivers, including the Indus, in danger of drying out: WWF
GENEVA: Many major rivers in the world, including the River Indus, are at risk of drying out because of climate change and dam construction, which could affect fresh water supplies and marine life, the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) said on Tuesday.
In a report ahead of the March 22 ââ¬ËWorld Water Dayââ¬â¢, the Swiss-based group identified 10 rivers, including the Nile, the Rio Grande and the Danube, as some of the worst victims of poor planning and inadequate protection.
ââ¬ÅRivers regularly no longer reach the sea, like the Indus in Pakistan, the Nile in Africa and the Rio Grande ... There are millions of people whose livelihoods are at risk,ââ¬Â said Jamie Pittock, director of WWFââ¬â¢s global freshwater programme.
Rivers are the worldââ¬â¢s main source of fresh water, and about half of the available supply is already being used up, he said.
Dams have destroyed habitats and cut rivers off from their flood plains, while climate change could alter the rules by which rivers have lived by for thousands of years, the report said.
Fish populations, the top source of protein and overall life support for hundreds of thousands of communities worldwide, are also being threatened, the report stated.
WWF urged governments to strike agreements on ways to better manage shared water resources in order to minimise damage. ââ¬ÅAll the rivers in the report symbolise the freshwater crisis signalled for years, but the alarm is falling on deaf ears,ââ¬Â Pittock said.
Other rivers on the warning list were the Yangtze, Mekong, Salween and Ganges, in Asia, the Rio Plata in South America and Australiaââ¬â¢s Murray-Darling, WWF said.
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2007\03\20\story_20-3-2007_pg7_27