Read more
Informationen zum Autor Stephen Brichieri-Colombi is a consulting engineer and Senior Research Fellow at King's College! University of London. He has 35 years experience in planning and implementing water resources development - including dams! irrigation and hydropower schemes! water supply! navigation and river planning - while living in more than thirty countries in Africa! Asia! the Middle East and South America. He was Chief Technical Advisor to the FAO on a basinwide Nile project and headed a team of advisors working on the Indo-Bangladeshi Joint Rivers Commission. He lives in Italy. Klappentext In the last decade! water resources planners have frequently signalled an impending water crisis. The message is that the world is running out of water and that only by careful planning and the adoption of integrated water resources management can catastrophe be avoided. Stephen Brichieri-Colombi challenges these perceptions. He maintains that the crisis is one of resource management rather than availability: it arises because water resource planners advocate exploitation of rivers without due regard to social! environmental and geopolitical consequences. The author advances a new paradigm--water in the national economy--which will enable developing countries to meet future food and water demands without increasing abstraction from rivers and consequential riparian conflict. A powerful re-appraisal of the development of global water resources. Water resources planners have frequently signalled an impending water crisis. The message is that the world is running out of water and that only by careful planning and the adoption of integrated water resources management can catastrophe be avoided. This title challenges these perceptions. Zusammenfassung In the last decade, water resources planners have frequently signalled an impending water crisis. The message is that the world is running out of water and that only by careful planning and the adoption of integrated water resources management can catastrophe be avoided. Stephen Brichieri-Colombi challenges these perceptions. He maintains that the crisis is one of resource management rather than availability: it arises because water resource planners advocate exploitation of rivers without due regard to social, environmental and geopolitical consequences. The author advances a new paradigm - water in the national economy - which will enable developing countries to meet future food and water demands without increasing abstraction from rivers and consequential riparian conflict. This is a powerful re-appraisal of the development of global water resources. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction1. Water in Crisis2. Weasel words of water3. Two large basins4. Unnatural relations5. Water lawlessness6. Basin anarchy7. Illusions of optimality8. Beyond the river9. Changing populations10. Supersizing the world11. Diets in Transition12. Food for all13. Blue and green energy14. Shopping around for food15. Changing the paradigm Notes Bibliography Index...