International | Too much, too little. Too late?

The poisonous global politics of water

Polarisation makes it harder to adapt to climate change

20 litre water cans are filled from pools dug in a dry river-bed in Androy Province, Madagascar
Photograph: Panos
|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.

The Economist today

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