DAVOS, Switzerland - Most people view water simply as a day-to-day resource, but water is also both a victim and cause of climate change, as seen in droughts in countries such as the Netherlands – long known for an abundance of water – and the loss of moisture in soil and forests, said panellists at the World Economic Forum (WEF) on Jan 17.
The issues related to water are low-hanging fruit in tackling climate change, as they can be solved through proven technologies and available financial resources, said President Tharman Shanmugaratnam, a panellist speaking in Davos, Switzerland, where the forum is being held from Jan 15 to 19.
First, however, governments and organisations need to understand the role it plays in the economy and climate change, said the panel, in a discussion about water and its role in achieving sustainability
This would help accelerate and scale up solutions looking at efficient management of water and also help advise policy around water pricing, said the panellists, who included members of the Global Commission on the Economics of Water, of which Mr Tharman is a co-chair. The commission is a global project to transform water governance.
Mr Tharman said solving the problems around water management is achievable within a reasonable period of time “if we organise ourselves well and if we finance this so that everyone benefits”.
He added that the technologies and innovations required are already known, and can be financed with resources from the global market system.
“What’s required… are changes in the way we govern water, together with biodiversity and everything else that it takes to solve the climate crisis. It’s changes in governance and changes in the way we finance,” he added.
Get a round-up of the top stories to start your day
Thank you!
Sign up
By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Policy and T&Cs.
There is proven technology that needs to be scaled up and made affordable to the ordinary farmer in India or Africa, and for local municipalities everywhere in the developing world, he said.
It also needs to be implemented at scale in the most advanced countries, he added.
Remote video URL
Another panellist, Dr Kirsten Schuijt, director-general at conservation organisation WWF International, pointed out that while water has direct economic value given its role in food and energy production, it also has huge indirect economic value, for instance, through wetlands and other freshwater ecosystems, which play a key role in processes like water purification and floodwater control.
“The problem is that we often don’t realise what that economic value is, and how that actually impacts us as people,” she said.
She added that while there are local communities in some countries such as Kenya and Malawi whose livelihoods depend on water, there are people in other parts of the world who take the availability of water for granted.
“We need to include the assessment of freshwater availability in our risk assessments as corporates as part of water stewardship, and be prepared for what will come over the next years as climate change is going to be impacting us wherever we sit,” she said.
askST: How is climate change fuelling water scarcity worldwide?
South Asia worst in world for water scarcity: UN
Mr Ulrik Gernow, chief operating officer of Danish pump manufacturer Grundfos, said water provision and management is ultimately a business.
“If there is a fair price of water, it will incentivise investment in water. It will incentivise actually innovating in water… putting new solutions in place, encouraging start-ups to actually come into this because… there’s actually good return on investment of actually doing the work,” he said.
He added that putting a higher value on water will lead to greater motivation for being more thoughtful about managing water demand and also increase the deployment of water reuse technologies.
Remote video URL
Mr Tharman said it is not only about scaling up one or two big innovations, but scaling up categories of innovations that would allow for competition and different experiments to flourish.
If the challenge is known and the solutions exist, what is required from the public sector is to define the challenge, explain how it is going to incentivise private investment, then regulate the solutions and call for bids, he said.
The public sector’s role in these new areas is to drive down the costs of new solutions by moving faster than the market would on its own.
“That’s what happened in solar. That’s what’s going to happen here as well. So the task of the public sector is to co-invest, mitigate risk and also to set standards and regulations,” he said.
President Tharman meets Chinese Premier Li Qiang, Ukraine President Zelensky in Davos
Constant replenishing of skills key to successful industrial policy: President Tharman at WEF
Unlock unlimited access to ST exclusive content, insights and analyses
ST One Digital - Annual
$9.90 $4.95 /month
Get offer
$59.40 for the first year and $118.80 per year thereafter.
ST One Digital - Monthly
29.90 $9.90 /month
Subscribe today
No lock-in contract
Unlock more knowledge, unlock more benefits
New feature: Stay up to date on important topics and follow your favourite writers with myST All subscriber-only content on ST app and straitstimes.com Easy access any time via ST app on one mobile device
Join ST's WhatsApp Channel and get the latest news and must-reads.
WORLD ECONOMIC FORUM 2024 Tharman Shanmugaratnam Davos Water resources Climate change
Facebook Telegram More Whatsapp Linkedin Twitter FB Messenger Email Print Purchase Article Copy permalink https://str.sg/dRZ4
Read this subscriber-only article for free!
Just sign up for a free account and log in to continue reading.
Solving the issue of water is low-hanging fruit in tackling climate crisis: President Tharman at WEF
Sign up
Already have an account? Log in.
All done! This article is now fully available for you
Solving the issue of water is low-hanging fruit in tackling climate crisis: President Tharman at WEF
Read now
Please verify your e-mail to read this subscriber-only article in full
Solving the issue of water is low-hanging fruit in tackling climate crisis: President Tharman at WEF
Resend verification e-mail
The gift link for this subscriber-only article has expired.
Get unlimited access to all stories at $0.99/month for the first 3 months.
Subscribe now
You have reached your limit of subscriber-only articles this month.
Get unlimited access to all stories at $0.99/month for the first 3 months.
Subscribe now
Read and win!
Read 3 articles and stand to win rewards
Let's go! Terms & conditions apply
Frequently asked questions
Good job, you've read 3 articles today!
Spin the wheel now
Let's go! Terms & conditions apply
Frequently asked questions