02/02/2006
- Gland, Switzerland – More than one billion people lack
access to freshwater and more than two billion people lack
adequate sanitation services. Wetlands and rivers are the
source of water, a source of life, and they are running
out fast. In some developing countries – worst hit by the
water crisis – the loss of wetlands forces people to walk
greater distances to fetch water for cooking and basic everyday
care.
"With already half the world’s wetlands gone, we need
a new mindset that appreciates wetlands as water’s source
and storage instead of land to be drained and developed,”
said Jamie Pittock, Director of WWF’s Freshwater Programme.
"It doesn’t matter how many dams you build to provide
energy, food and water – without properly functioning lakes
and rivers, there will be not be enough water.” About two
billion people are already experiencing water shortages.
According to the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment Synthesis
report, wild caught fisheries and freshwater are exploited
well beyond sustainable levels and this does not factor
in future, growing demand. Water removal for human use means
that several major rivers, including the Nile, Yellow, and
Colorado Rivers, do not always flow to the sea.
A recent WWF report shows that freshwater fish are under
particular threat without enough oxygen to breathe as waters
grow warmer. The link is perhaps nowhere more evident than
in mountains such as the Alps and Himalayas where glacier
meltdown affects the reliability of water flowing to towns
and farms downstream.
“Wetlands’ values need also to be seen in economic terms
because once lost, the billions of dollars in material and
services provided by these freshwater systems are almost
never recoverable,” added Pittock.
On this World Wetlands Day, WWF urges governments and communities
engaged in land and water resource management to think twice
before draining wetlands. WWF reminds leaders of the added
impact of climate change which is already intensifying droughts
and floods.
END NOTES:
• The Convention on Wetlands, signed in Ramsar, Iran, in
1971, is an intergovernmental treaty which provides the
framework for national action and international cooperation
for the conservation and wise use of wetlands and their
resources. There are presently 150 Contracting Parties to
the Convention, with 1,556 wetland sites, totalling 129.6
million hectares, designated for inclusion in the Ramsar
List of Wetlands of International Importance.
• WWF works to protect and manage 250 million hectares of
representative wetlands by 2010. To date, WWF has been the
catalyst for reservation of 4.75 per cent (49 million hectares)
freshwater habitat from 1999-2005. |