How Much Water Are You Really Using?In the press release, titled "Wealthy world at woes from water risk
elsewhere", the WWF examined Germany’s "water footprint". They showed
that only about half of the water Germany uses actually comes from
Germany. Germany’s water comes from all over the world. "The water
embedded in coffee, soy and beef imports makes Brazil Germany’s largest
water trading partner, followed by the Ivory Coast (cocoa, coffee,
bananas and cotton), neighbours France and the Netherlands, the US and
Indonesia (oilseeds, coffee, coconuts, cotton and cocoa)." In addition
to the above, significant amounts of their “virtual water”� comes from
Argentina, India, Ghana, Nigeria, and from Mediterranean countries that
are becoming drier and drier — Spain, Italy and Turkey. Germany has taken a lead on international water issues by signing on to the UN Watercourses Convention. However, not enough other countries have signed on to make the convention come into effect yet. Flavia Loures, leading a WWF-initiated global campaign to get the convention brought into effect by 2011, says: "Other major economies would do well to follow Germany’s example in signing up to the UN Watercourses Convention to provide a global framework for minimising the risks of disruption to the water supplies they depend on." If we’re using the water, we’re responsible for protecting and conserving it as well. Hopefully, other countries will sign on to the UN Watercourses Convention soon. This article was reproduced with the kind permission of Matter Network.
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