Water we going to do?
Issue 1702
In the UK, warnings about resilience in a privatised water system have been issued for decades, but action has lagged. This year, the chickens are coming home to roost. Several of England’s water companies are on the verge of collapse, burdened by huge debt mountains. The government has baulked at nationalisation, but may have to step in to keep the taps running.
Zoom out, and the problems are even starker. Around 1.4 billion people live in areas of high water vulnerability. In Iran, prolonged drought pushed cities towards what officials call “day zero”, when water systems cease to
function. The subsequent unrest has been met with violent repression. In India, millions rely on dwindling groundwater levels for drinking and irrigation. From the Horn of Africa to Central America, failing water systems are driving hunger, displacement and migration.
In this issue, we ask what’s going wrong. From sewage-choked rivers to water-guzzling AI data centres, we investigate failures, question who is accountable, and ask what meaningful reform might look like. But if it all sounds a bit Mad Max, fear not. There are solutions. We take a look at a few – including activists cleaning up polluted lakes and communities building resilience.
So buy this week’s Big Issue and dive in…
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