MANILA: Asian countries, including India, are facing a worsening water crisis that threatens to curtail food production while taking an increasingly heavy toll on the region's economies, the Asian Development Bank said.
Governments, industries and people around the region urgently need to stop wasting so much of the precious resource if they are to limit the shortage, ADB infrastructure advisor Arjun Thapan said.
"It needs to shrink and Asia needs to become acutely conscious of the scarcity value of its accessible freshwater, and the imperative of efficiency in managing it."
In a report, the ADB faulted weak enforcement of laws for the degradation of Asian water quality, with between 80 and 89 per cent of all untreated wastewater leaching into fresh water in east and south Asia, respectively.
"In short, Asia is witnessing a despoliation of its freshwater resources with disastrous consequences for ecological balance and environmental sustainability," the bank said.
It also highlighted that while irrigated agriculture uses up 80 per cent of the region's fresh water, there have been only very minimal irrigation efficiencies since 1990.
Climate change, rapid industrialization, water pollution, dietary shifts and the drive to grow biofuels are also expected to deepen the water crisis, according to Thapan.
On current trends, this would lead to a 40 per cent gap between water demand and supply in Asia by 2030.
"The impact is going to be greatest on food production and investment in the energy sector," Thapan told a news conference.
"All of these, doubtless, is going to impact on overall economic growth."
Among the region's largest countries, the ADB estimated India would have a water deficit of 50 per cent by 2030 while China would have a shortage of 25 per cent.
China, India, Pakistan, Vietnam, Bangladesh, Nepal, Uzbekistan and Cambodia are currently feeling the heaviest impacts of the water shortage in terms of food