Water scarcity raises risks to energy supplies: WEC report
Xinhua, March 17, 2016 Adjust font size:
The World Energy Council (WEC) predicted a 40 percent shortfall of available water across the globe by 2030 in a new report presented at the Asia-Pacific Energy Leaders' summit in Wellington Thursday.
In the report named "The road to resilience - managing the risks of energy-water-food nexus," the WEC said the water shortfall would have effects on drinking, food production, hygiene and public health, as well as 98 percent of global electric power generation.
WEC Secretary General Christoph Frei said that the energy-water-food nexus poses "a systemic risk," which could impact the robustness of the energy supply and demand over many years to come.
"Clear co-ordination and integrated planning needs to take place now or we will start to see the effects of water scarcity on energy supplies in the very near future," said Frei, "assuming a water price during project planning is one way to trigger the right signals."
The report, prepared by over 140 experts across the world, made recommendations to deal with the water scarcity.
The recommendations include a wider range of financial and insurance instruments to hedge short term risks, full risk assessments to investors include different climate and hydrological scenarios in financial analyses, reliable and transparent regulatory and legal framework that takes into account of water issues and competing stakeholders' interest.
"If we are to counter the problems of water access, then cross-border co-operation is vital. We should be taking full advantage of the 261 international trans-boundary basins that cover 45 percent of the earth's land surface. Energy resilience can only be achieved by moving from individual to joint efforts," said Frei.
The report is the second in a series of reports that assesses the financing of resilient energy infrastructure and identifies the investment and system changes required to combat new emerging risks including extreme weather, the energy-water-food nexus and cyber risks.
On March 16-17, the WEC and BusinessNZ Energy Council hosted the Asia-Pacific Energy Leaders' Summit in New Zealand capital.
Energy Ministers and high level officials from several Asia-Pacific countries, as well as CEOs, senior executives, experts from across the world came together to discuss growing risks and challenges in global energy field. Endit