International | Too much, too little. Too late?

The poisonous global politics of water

Polarisation makes it harder to adapt to climate change

A child collects water from a station pipe that supplies water in Bangladesh
Photograph: Panos Pictures/ GMB Akash
|DENILIQUIN, MATHARE AND PUNITAQUI

THE WATER thieves come at night. They arrive in trucks, suck water out of irrigation canals and drive off. This infuriates Alejandro Meneses, who owns a big vegetable farm in Coquimbo, a parched province of Chile. In theory his landholding comes with the right to pour 40 litres of river-water a second on his fields. But thanks to drought, exacerbated by theft, he can get just a tenth of that, which he must negotiate with his neighbours. If the price of food goes up because farmers like him cannot grow enough, “there will be a big social problem,” he says.

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This article appeared in the International section of the print edition under the headline “The poisonous politics of water”

From the August 31st 2024 edition

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