China Faces a Water
Crisis<http://www.businessweek.com/globalbiz/content/apr2009/gb20090415_032220.htm?campaign_id=rss_as>
After
decades of massive economic growth and the migration of villagers to cities,
the scarcity of water in China is more dire than ever

By Dexter Roberts<http://www.businessweek.com/print/bios/Dexter_Roberts.htm>

Over the past year getting clean water has been a struggle for many in
China. In February one of the most severe droughts to hit China in a
half-century affected some 5 million people and 2.5 million livestock in the
provinces of Hebei and Henan, near Beijing. Farther south in Yancheng,
Jiangsu, 300 kilometers from Shanghai, more than 200,000 people were cut off
from clean water for three days when a chemical factory dumped carbolic acid
into a river. Just before the Olympics last June, the coastal city of
Qingdao, site of the sailing events, saw an explosion of algae in nearby
waters that may have been caused by pollution.

These are hardly unusual in China. The country that has a long history of
devastating floods and droughts arguably faces an even bigger water crisis
today <http://bx.businessweek.com/chinas-environmental-crisis/>. After
almost 30 years of double-digit economic growth and the migration of hundreds
of millions of villagers to the
cities<http://www.businessweek.com/globalbiz/content/nov2008/gb20081113_305364.htm>,
China has been barely able to meet the spike in demand for water. Its
resources were scarce to begin with and pollution has made clean water even
scarcer. Another unknown: the effect of climate change. "Based on our
country's basic water situation, [we] must implement the strictest water
resource management," said Vice-Premier Hui Liangyu at a national water
conference in Beijing in January.

The scale of the challenge is enormous. Every year, on average 15.3 million
hectares of farmland—13% of the total—faces drought. Today some 300 million
people living in rural areas, or nearly a quarter of China's population of
1.3 billion, don't have access to safe drinking water. And among more than
600 Chinese cities, 400 are facing water shortages, including 100 that may
see serious shortages, says Ma Jun, director of the Beijing-based Institute
of Public & Environmental Affairs and author of China's Water Crisis. The
country would need another 40 billion cubic meters of water a year—about a
tenth of the volume of Lake Erie in the U.S.—to meet the needs of all of its
city dwellers fully. "China is facing a dire situation in its water supply,"
says Ma.
Years of Damage

One of China's biggest problems: wastewater. Factories and cities have
discharged mostly untreated sewage and pollutants into the country's rivers
and lakes—some 53.7 billion tons in 2006 alone, according to the World Bank.
China's environmental regulators have designated 48 of China's major lakes
as seriously polluted. One-fourth of the water sampled along China's two
largest rivers—the Yangtze and Yellow—was found to be too polluted even for
farm irrigation. And tap water isn't entirely safe, either, with Chinese
authorities responding to 48 large-scale environmental emergencies last
year. "Extensive water pollution of course impacts on water
scarcity<http://bx.businessweek.com/global-water-resources/>.
This is especially [true] in China," says Washington-based Jamal Saghir,
director of the Energy, Transport & Water Unit of the World Bank.

China's huge population is a strain, too. The country's water resources are
only about 25% of the average per capita for countries around the world.
That problem is compounded by a huge regional disparity. Southern China has
a relative abundance of water, getting more than 2,000 millimeters (79
inches) a year of rainfall. In the north—where 17 million people live in
Beijing and 12 million live in Tianjin—the average annual rainfall is just
200mm to 400mm (7.9 in. to 15.8 in.) a year. "Availability of water drops to
a very low level on the north China plain, even below that of Israel," says
Ma. And this region is home to "China's political and cultural capital,
major manufacturing, and one of China's bread baskets," he adds.

China has worsened its own problems by offering large subsidies for water to
keep prices low. That practice has led to plenty of waste, experts say. Even
though China has hiked average water prices more than tenfold in the past
two decades, prices are still far below global market prices and a fraction
of levels in the U.S. The global financial crisis has only made price
reforms more difficult. "Water prices can be a life-or-death issue for the
poor in developing countries," says the World Bank's Saghir. "It's a problem
because it is more difficult to implement reform when many cannot afford to
pay any higher costs for water."
Lost Opportunity

Roughly 65% of the country's total water usage goes to agriculture, but less
than half actually reaches the crops; the rest leaks from pipes, evaporates,
or is otherwise lost on the way to the fields, according to World Bank
statistics. And of the 25% that goes to China's industry, the majority isn't
recycled. That compares to a recycling average of as high as 85% in
developing countries. As more Chinese flock to cities, the 10% that goes to
homes is likely to rise.

For now, China's government is trying to spend its way out of the dilemma.
By September of last year, the country had invested $7.46 billion into 2,712
water treatment projects, according to China's Ministry of Environmental
Protection. Beijing has embarked on a massive and controversial
multibillion-dollar effort to transport water from southern regions. But the
project has been delayed over both environmental concerns and resistance
from the estimated 300,000 farmers who would have to be relocated because of
a canal and water-pumping and cleaning facilities. High costs limit many
technological solutions: Water desalination, for example, is not only
expensive but requires a huge amount of energy, another resource in short
supply.

At least one multinational company is taking matters into its own hands.
Last October, at a conference in Beijing, Wal-Mart Stores
(WMT<http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/snapshot/snapshot.asp?symbol=WMT>)
pledged to cut water use in
half<http://www.businessweek.com/globalbiz/content/oct2008/gb20081024_159130.htm>at
its more than 115 China outlets over the next two years. The
Bentonville
(Ark.) retailer also said that starting in January 2009 it will audit all of
its more than 1,000 mainland suppliers to ensure they reduce their
wastewater discharges, too. The company plans to monitor emissions and
hazardous waste disposal. "Sustainability in our operations and our supply
chain, selling and making products in an efficient, socially, and
environmentally responsible way" is Wal-Mart's goal, former CEO and
President H. Lee
Scott<http://investing.businessweek.com/businessweek/research/stocks/people/person.asp?personId=313059&symbol=WMT>told
employees at the conference. "[It] will be essential to meeting the
expectations of customers in the future," he added.

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