This is the VOA Special English Agriculture Report, from
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An American
intelligence report says water-related problems will likely increase tensions
around the world in the next ten years. These problems include water shortages,
poor water quality and floods. The report says the problems will increase the
risk of instability and the failure of governments. However, countries are seen
as unlikely to go to war over water. The report says water tensions have
historically led to more water-sharing agreements than violent conflicts. But
beyond ten years, it warns that some governments could use water as a weapon to
pressure others. And water could also be used to "further terrorist objectives."
The report is called an Intelligence Community Assessment on Global Water
Security. It looks at possible effects of water problems on United States
national security interests over the next thirty years. It says the areas that
will be most affected by water problems are North Africa, the Middle East and
South Asia. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announced the report on World
Water Day, which was observed March twenty-fourth. The National Intelligence
Council wrote the report based on a National Intelligence Estimate she requested
a year ago. The report says water-related problems could distract countries from
working with the United States on important policy goals. But it also predicts
an increased demand for American aid and expert help to solve those problems.
That demand could create "opportunities for leadership" and influence. The
report says, "Water shortages, poor water quality, and floods by themselves are
unlikely to result in state failure." But these could combine with poverty,
social tensions, environmental problems, poor leadership and weak governments to
produce social disorder. And that combination could cause state failure. The
report predicts that from now through twenty forty, "water shortages and
pollution probably will harm the economic performance of important trading
partners." During the next ten years, it says, the loss of groundwater supplies
in some agricultural areas will create a risk to national and global food
markets. These shortages will be a result of poor management. Agriculture uses
about seventy percent of the world's freshwater. The report says technology that
reduces the amount of water needed to grow crops will offer the best defense
against shortages. For VOA Special English, I'm Carolyn Presutti. (Adapted from
a radio program broadcast 27Mar2012)
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