Current:Home > MarketsWater as Part of the Climate Solution -Core Financial Strategies
Water as Part of the Climate Solution
View
Date:2025-04-17 15:15:56
The intersection of freshwater and climate is a frequently ignored but critical element of the climate problem, according to a new study from Sweden that explores the link and offers solutions that will help lower emissions.
Two years in the making, the study, “The Essential Drop to Reach Net-Zero: Unpacking Freshwater’s Role in Climate Change Mitigation,” published by the Stockholm Resilience Centre, identifies forests and freshwater wetlands as a crucial depository of carbon. More than 30 percent of estimated global carbon emissions are sequestered in wetlands. So the need to protect and restore them is urgent.
“The global water supply is the bloodstream of the Earth and the foundation of any successful mitigation action, since Earth’s climate system and water cycle are deeply intertwined,” said Malin Lundberg Ingemarsson, program manager at the Stockholm International Water Institute and the study’s lead author. “Ours is the first-ever summary of current research on the role of water in climate mitigation.”
Swamps, bogs and marshes cover 118,000 square miles in the U.S., an area larger than the state of Arizona. More than half of the wetlands the U.S. originally held have been lost due to farming and development, even though wetlands have one of the highest stores of soil carbon in the Earth’s biosphere. The best known wetland in the U.S. is the Florida Everglades. Despite its vast expanse, the Everglades is only 50 percent of its original size—much has been drained for development. Other famous wetlands include the Okavango Delta in Botswana, the Mekong Delta in Vietnam and the Pantanal, an area of Bolivia, Brazil and Paraguay which covers an area larger than England.
“Water is continuously overlooked in discussions about climate,” said Juliet Christian-Smith, Western States Regional Director at the Union of Concerned Scientists, who was not involved in the study. “This report gives great advice. It’s very unwise not to consider water as part of the solution.”
The study also concludes that water loss caused by climate change can severely affect power production. Dams with poor siting, design and management can result in lower power generation and higher climate emissions.
Drought conditions in the Southwest, long predicted by climate experts, threatens hydropower production at Lake Mead and Hoover Dam in Nevada and Arizona, for example, where water levels are at their lowest since 1937, when the reservoir was first filled.
Lake Mead is currently at 27 percent capacity, according to NASA. Hydropower is a vital source of alternative energy and generates power without climate emissions. Freshwater is also vital for other forms of carbon-free energy production, such as nuclear power plants, which need freshwater for cooling. Over the summer, two reactors in France were shut down entirely because prolonged drought reduced the amount of available cooling water. Several other French nuclear plants along the Rhone and Garonne Rivers were forced to reduce their output.
The transition to renewable energies can reduce the pressure and effects on water resources from energy production, largely due to the low water demands of solar and wind.
The study also examines wastewater as a major source of emissions, both from treatment plants and untreated waste. Greenhouse gases, primarily methane, are created by biological processes taking place in untreated wastewater. In the U.S., wastewater also contains nitrogen and phosphorus from human waste, food, fertilizer, soaps and detergents.
More than 2 million people in the U.S. live without access to adequate wastewater infrastructure. By some estimates, nearly half of wastewater released into the global environment is untreated. Treatment plants globally account for roughly 3 percent of greenhouse gas emissions.
Emissions from wastewater treatment plants, however, can be cut with improved design and management, the study says. Energy efficiency measures can lower emissions, and wastewater plants can install anaerobic digesters that produce methane, which can be burned for heat and power.
Much of the wastewater from cities and rural areas around the world is either untreated or partially treated, and emissions from untreated sewage is an estimated three times higher than emissions from conventional wastewater treatment plants. The expansion of wastewater collection and treatment systems will be critical to reducing climate change in the future, according to the study.
“Water is rarely taken into account when we look for climate solutions,” said Ingemarsson. “We need to take an integrated approach. We can no longer work in silos.”
Looking forward, Ingemarsson called for further research in the role water plays in climate mitigation and hopes for broader dissemination of the study, especially at an important U.N. conference on water in New York in March 2023. It will be the most important water conference of its kind since the 1970s.
This study led by Ingemarsson, included contributions from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), the Stockholm Resilience Centre (SRC), Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ), and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).
Charlie Miller is a writer living in Baltimore who covers climate change and other environmental issues.
veryGood! (28194)
Related
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- 'Super Models' doc reveals disdain for Crawford's mole, Evangelista's ‘deep depression’
- Gossip Girl Alum Leighton Meester Channels Blair Waldorf in Stylish Red Carpet Look
- Medicaid expansion back on glidepath to enactment in North Carolina as final budget heads to votes
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- A Danish artist submitted blank frames as artwork. Now, he has to repay the museum
- Syrian President Bashar Assad arrives in China on first visit since the beginning of war in Syria
- Jason Kelce Says Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce Romance Rumors Are 100 Percent True
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Gates Foundation commits $200 million to pay for medical supplies, contraception
Ranking
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- Having a hard time finding Clorox wipes? Blame it on a cyberattack
- Judge sets trial date to decide how much Giuliani owes 2 election workers in damages
- Ozzy Osbourne Shares His Why He's Choosing to Stop Surgeries Amid Health Battle
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- She has Medicare and Medicaid. So why should it take 18 months to get a wheelchair?
- Maryland apologizes to man wrongly convicted of murder, agrees to $340K payment for years in prison
- Biden Finds Funds to Launch an ‘American Climate Corps’ With Existing Authority Congress Has Given to Agencies
Recommendation
2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
A sculptor and a ceramicist who grapple with race win 2023 Heinz Awards for the Arts
Ohio’s political mapmakers are going back to work after Republican infighting caused a week’s delay
Ohio’s political mapmakers are going back to work after Republican infighting caused a week’s delay
Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
Governor appoints Hollis T. Lewis to West Virginia House
Exclusive: Pentagon to review cases of LGBTQ+ veterans denied honorable discharges under don't ask, don't tell
Highway traffic pollution puts communities of color at greater health risk