Innovations in water management to sustain cities
As the
world's urban population continues to swell, the need to employ new and
innovative approaches to ensuring safe and adequate water for city dwellers in
developing countries is becoming increasingly pressing. Within the next 20
years, 60 percent of the world's population will live in cities, with most
urban expansion taking place in the developing world. Ensuring access to
nutritious, affordable food for the poorer of these city-dwellers is emerging
as a real challenge. Expanding city populations require increased water
supplies for drinking, washing and cooking. In turn, a demand for more food
translates into more water needed for expanding marketplaces, agro-industry and
food processing operations. And growth in urban and peri-urban agriculture also
means a heightened demand for irrigation water.
This array of pressures on urban water supplies requires non-conventional
alternatives to creating more resilient cities. For instance, rainwater harvesting
in cities holds great potential for urban agriculture, but is as yet relatively
untapped. Meanwhile, good agriculture and forestry practices can contribute to
sound watershed management, safeguarding water catchment and reducing runoff
and flooding in cities.
Water reuse
Urban residents, who must purchase rather than grow their food, are
particularly vulnerable to increases in the price of staples, especially in
developing countries. In today's era of volatile food prices, there has been a
return to these traditional practices of cultivating food in urban settings. FAO
is working with its member countries to explore options for water reuse, while
ensuring that this water is carefully treated and managed in order to be safely
and hygienically used to produce crops. In areas of high water scarcity, some
cities are already making the shift. In Tunisia, where treatment infrastructure
is well established, 30-43% of purified wastewater is used for agricultural and
landscape irrigation. Farmers in the Tula Valley, downstream from Mexico City,
irrigate 90 000 hectares of land using yearly 1 500 million cubic meters of
untreated municipal wastewater. Though some natural purification of the
wastewater occurs during transport, plans are in the works to build six treatment
plants to adequately deal with food safety issues. In Senegal, FAO is working
with Dakar's city's sanitation agency on a project that will provide effluents
from two treatment plants to urban irrigation districts for use by local
farmers, who are getting training in best practices to ensure the safety of
their produce.
Urban agriculture increases the availability of healthy and affordable food (usually
fresh fruits, vegetables, eggs and dairy products) for other consumers, as
surplus production is sold to neighbours.
FAO's "Growing Greener Cities"
programme supports urban and peri-urban agriculture to ensure that urban
households are more food secure and benefit from a more diverse diet.
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