Meeting our Water Needs for the Next 25 Years (2024)

https://environmentagency.blog.gov.uk/2024/03/21/meeting-our-water-needs-for-the-next-25-years/

Meeting our Water Needs for the Next 25 Years (1)

When we make a cup of tea, coffee, or get a cold drink from the tap, we sometimes take for granted the huge journey that the water has been on. We may not be aware of the amount of work and planning that has gone into ensuring its quality and availability. We turn on the tap, and there it is.

But with climate change and population growth, the demand for water is ever increasing. Many areas of England are already experiencing water shortages. In parts of Sussex, Cambridgeshire, Suffolk, and Norfolk, additional demands on water supply from businesses, and new housing developments, are putting huge pressure on water resources.

Our current water provision is not enough to see us into the future. We will need alternative options, and we are working with others to implement them. At the Environment Agency we work closely with water companies and organisations to help them manage their water supplies to enable businesses, the environment, the economy, and the population to thrive.

Reviewing water companies Water Resource Management Plans (WRMPs) is one of the most important ways we are ensuring there is enough water to meet future demands. These plans set out how water companies will govern our water security and protection of the environment for the next 25 years. They include a range of schemes that are key to ensuring sufficient supply of water both now and in the future.

How much extra water will we need?

By 2050, in order to support a growing population, the economy, food production and protect the environment, we are going to need a lot more water. Almost 5 billion litres a day, in fact*. That’s over two million wheelie bins full of water every day, on top of the water we already use.

Meeting our Water Needs for the Next 25 Years (2)

This daunting challenge can only be met by combining a number of different approaches. We need to use the water we have now as efficiently as possible while enabling new technology to help us to capture, store and utilise more water.As our climate changes and we experience more extreme weather, we will need to invest so our future water supplies become independent of rainfall. This won’t be overnight, but it is a future we will need to work towards. We are tackling this challenge head-on.

Saving water

In the immediate future, our focus is on saving water. There are huge opportunities to use water more efficiently and stop the millions of litres of water being lost per day in our homes and businesses through leaking pipes, toilets, taps and urinals. Water companies are already running campaigns focused on ways we can save water, but this alone isn’t enough. We all need to do our bit by taking responsibility and tackling water wastage. Water companies need to repair infrastructure, install smart meters and engage with their customers, to help them save water too. This will mean that less water will be taken from the environment, less water and wastewater needs to be pumped and treated, and fewer new supplies will be needed.

Alternative ways of generating water

Water companies are now able to choose from a greater range of options including traditional and newer methods. Our current supply of water comes from rivers, reservoirs, lakes, and underground systems that store and transport water. Reservoirs and water transfers will continue to play a significant role in water supply. We will need new water transfer and storage infrastructure and there are several new proposals in the pipeline. But in a changing climate and with an increased population these will need to work in tandem with options that are less reliant on rainfall.

Desalination and water recycling as water supply options

Desalination is the treatment of brackish (slightly salty) or seawater to remove dissolved salts and other organic chemicals. This provides a source of fresh water, that after treatment, is suitable for drinking. Water recycling is another method used around the world. This involves taking water from wastewater, cleaning and treating it to the highest standards. Water recycling can supply water back indirectly or directly, so homes and businesses can have a safe and reliable source of water.

What’s the benefit of using these additional schemes?

Desalination and Recycling both contribute to a secure supply of water into the future, and they can provide additional water in areas where demand exceeds supply. During drought they can relieve pressure on existing supplies and provide an additional option to developments such as reservoirs.

Meeting our Water Needs for the Next 25 Years (3)

Water Resources Management Plans

By law, water companies must produce a Water Resources Management Plan (WRMP) every five years. Water companies are nearing the end of the latest round.

As a statutory consultee for WRMPs from all water companies, the Environment Agency has a key role in reviewing all draft WRMPs and providing feedback to the companies. The latest WRMPs produced by water companies are extremely important for society and once finalised, their effective delivery will be critical to ensuring sustainable growth, resilient supplies and protecting the environment.

Our latest summary report of the water companies’ Water Resources Management Plans includes significant ambitions to reduce water demand and leakage and shows that collectively the plans would meet the statutory Water Demand target if successful.

Key factors are:

  • Smart water meters will be a key enabler of water efficiency activities and help to identify and reduce leakage – we expect them to become the standard moving forward
  • New supplies are needed and decisions for the current WRMPs are critical. Alongside new reservoirs, the revised plans reflect a transition towards new supplies that are independent from rainfall including water recycling and desalination
  • There are uncertainties about some aspects of the plans, for example, whether demand reduction can be achieved and whether new infrastructure can be brought on quick enough. Where necessary, the water industry will need to adapt.

You can read the full summary report here: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/a-review-of-englands-draft-regional-and-water-resources-management-plans.

*Please note, this deficit has risen in the revised draft plans due to updated demand forecasts, additional reductions associated with protecting and improving the environment, and better representation of the baseline supply position without drought measures included.

Meeting our Water Needs for the Next 25 Years (2024)

FAQs

Do we have enough water for our future needs? ›

If current usage trends don't change, the world will have only 60 percent of the water it needs in 2030. By 2035, the world's energy consumption will increase by 35 percent, which in turn will increase water use by 15 percent according to the International Energy Agency.

What will be the world's biggest water problem in the future? ›

Over 2 billion people already lack access to safe drinking water at home, and by 2025 over half of the world's population will reside in water-stressed areas. These numbers will increase significantly if climate change and population growth follow or exceed predicted trajectories.

How many more years will we have water? ›

Unless water use is drastically reduced, severe water shortage will affect the entire planet by 2040. "There will be no water by 2040 if we keep doing what we're doing today". - Professor Benjamin Sovacool, Aarhus University, Denmark.

Will there be enough water in 2050? ›

Demand for water will have grown by 40% by 2050, and 25% of people will live in countries without enough access to clean water. This warning does not come as a surprise. The UN, and other global organizations, have been warning us of water shortages by 2050 for years — if not decades.

Will we run out of water in 2030? ›

Yet, our world's water resources are being compromised. Today, 80% of our wastewater flows untreated back into the environment, while 780 million people still do not have access to an improved water source. By 2030, we may face a 40% global gap between water supply and demand.

How much water will be left in 2050? ›

The population of India is expected to stabilize around 1640 million by the year 2050. As a result, gross per capita water availability will decline from ~ 1820 m3/ yr in 2001 to as low as ~ 1140 m3/yr in 2050.

Which country will run out of water first? ›

According to current projections, Cape Town will run out of water in a matter of months. This coastal paradise of 4 million on the southern tip of South Africa is to become the first modern major city in the world to completely run dry.

Which states will run out of water first? ›

Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Nebraska, California and Idaho are using more water than they receive each year, depleting groundwater reserves to support farming and industrial use.

What will occur by 2025 with water? ›

By 2025, two-thirds of the world's population may be facing water shortages. When waters run dry, people can't get enough to drink, wash, or feed crops, and economic decline may occur.

How many years until we have no water? ›

Scientists predict that if we don't work to slow down freshwater depletion, our planet will become uninhabitable by 2048. According to World Water Development Report #6, the world's total annual water consumption is 4.74 billion cubic kilometers per year.

Where in the US is water plentiful? ›

1. Alaska. This cold state in the Pacific Northwest contains more than 40% of the country's surface water resources – it covers over 94,743 square miles of water area! Across Alaska, there are over 12,000 rivers, millions of lakes, and many creeks and ponds.

What year will the Earth be covered in water? ›

The simple answer is no. The whole world will never be underwater. But our coastlines would be very different. If all the ice covering Antarctica , Greenland, and in mountain glaciers around the world were to melt, sea level would rise about 70 meters (230 feet).

What will be the future of water? ›

Population growth, lifestyle changes, development, and agricultural practices will contribute to an increasing demand for water during the next 20 years. Global water use is likely to increase by 20 to 50 percent above current levels by 2050, with industrial and domestic sectors growing at the fastest pace.

What country has the worst water scarcity? ›

Guinea-Bissau has one of the most compromised and worst supplies of drinking water around the world. In 2022, only 23.9% of the country's people could access safe drinking water.

What are the three main causes of water scarcity? ›

By addressing these causes, we can do better with the 1% we have.
  • Climate Change. ...
  • Natural Disasters. ...
  • War and Conflict. ...
  • Wastewater. ...
  • Water Waste. ...
  • Lack of Water Data. ...
  • Lack of International Cooperation On Shared Water Sources. ...
  • Lack Of Infrastructure.
Mar 22, 2022

Do we have enough water for our population? ›

Billions of People Lack Water

Clean freshwater is an essential ingredient for a healthy human life, but 1.1 billion people lack access to water and 2.7 billion experience water scarcity at least one month a year.

Do we have enough drinking water for everybody on Earth? ›

In essence, only 0.007 percent of the planet's water is available to fuel and feed its 6.8 billion people. Due to geography, climate, engineering, regulation, and competition for resources, some regions seem relatively flush with freshwater, while others face drought and debilitating pollution.

Will we always have enough water? ›

So it might appear that our planet may one day run out of water. Fortunately, that is not the case. Earth contains huge quantities of water in its oceans, lakes, rivers, the atmosphere, and believe it or not, in the rocks of the inner Earth.

Will we ever run out of water? ›

Water is the world's most vital resource. The world knows how to access it and deliver it to the people who need it. We won't run out of water, but this vitally important resource demands vitally important efforts to establish access to it for generations to come.

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