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A
study published by McGill University in Montreal and Utrecht University in the
Netherlands, analyzed data from global ground water use against computer
generated models of underwater aquifers and concluded that the “groundwater
footprint” of reliable resources above ground is 3.5 times larger than the known
aquifers.
UNESCO’s
Intergovernmental Council of the International Hydrological Program (HIP) estimates
that there is 366 million, trillion gallon of water on Earth.
The IPCC document
HS 15332
Climate Change Impacts: Securitization of Water, Food, Soil, Health, Energy
and Migration explains how the UN plans to secure resources to use at their
disposal. Through the International Monetary Fund (IMF) under-developed
countries are forced to sell their resources to the global Elite as “full cost
recovery” to the global central bankers. Once those resources are under the
complete control of the creditors, they become assets to be reallocated back to
the enslaved nations for a price.
This scheme makes
water sources under central privatization cost more and become less accessible
to those who desperately need it. Water prices rise while the quality of it
diminishes. This forces people in places like South Africa and India to collect
water from polluted streams and rivers, which compromises their health. The
cycle in complete when those who had their water stolen from them through
coercion die from contaminated water that they were forced to use.
With
over-population factored into the algorithms, underground water reserves and
their native ecosystems are under the growing threat of human necessity.
Geophysicists at
the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research states
that only 282 billion people could be “packed onto the planet”. With the
current number at nearly 7 billion, alarmists are pointing out that water will
become a highly sought after commodity.
As exampled in
South-east Asia, because of the 1.7 billion people using water reserves, the
“sobering” fact concluded is that people are over-using groundwater in regions
like Asia and North America.
With proper
management, Tom Gleeson, lead researcher from McGill University, believes that
underground water sources that make up 99% of the world’s fresh and unfrozen
water will become crucial to the growing human population.
The UN
Environmental Program (UNEP) in a
UN-Water Survey of 130 Countries Status Report has forced reformation
through international water laws that apply pressure under the guise of
“expanding populations, urbanization and climate change”. While clean drinking
water for humans is controlled, improvements designed to ensure freshwater
reserves for the ecosystem are first and foremost.
Management and
use of water under the international agreement known as Integrated Water
Resources Management (IWRM) was back at the 1992 UN Conference on Sustainable
Development. This is a part of the Agenda 21 plan. Cooperation of the UNEP and
the UN-Water, an inter-agency mechanism to control freshwater resources, relates
UN policies to governments on how to allocate their assets.
In Asia and North
America, where researchers conclude that water resources are being allocated
wastefully, agriculture is being attacked because of its use of water for
irrigation. Gleeson says: “The relatively few aquifers that are being heavily
exploited are unfortunately critical to agriculture in a number of different
countries. So even though the number is relatively small, these are critical
resources that need better management.”
Gleeson claims that agriculture’s effect on “the supply of available water” has not had a quantifying measure until his study to show “the impact of such agricultural groundwater use in any consistent, global way.”
By mandating
international restriction on water extraction combined with the promotion of
meat-less diets, Gleeson asserts that water resources could be shared more
sustainably.
The British
Geological Survey and the University College London have surveyed
African underground aquifers and concluded that there are more than 100
times the amount of water found underground than on the surface of the
continent.
Andrew Mitchell,
the United Kingdom’s Secretary of State for International Development is
delighted by this find. “This is an important discovery. This research, which
the British Government has funded, could have a profound effect on some of the
world’s poorest people.”
This discovery
could become the largest attempt at water privatization. Water resources
worldwide have succumbed to privatization, turning life’s most essential
molecule into a global commodity.
In North Africa,
uncontrolled plans to extract underground water resources have been deemed
unsustainable by the UN.
In disbursement
of water resources, while trying to mitigate
waste , the use of sewage effluent and other wastewater could preserve
wildlife, rivers and ecosystems that are being destroyed by human necessity, in
a new study. Stanley Grant, lead author of the study and a UC Irvine civil &
environmental engineering professor, states: “This is the only path forward to
provide water for humans as well as for ecosystems. We need to focus on
improving the productivity and value of existing supplies, which basically means
getting more out of a glass of water.”
Water shortages
could be rescinded
by creating drinking water from wastewater while reducing the total waste
from compromised piping in private-owned homes. How water is priced and managed
must be reworked to make the most of “scare freshwater resources” say the
researchers.
The securitization of
water is a conflict of control over society and the right to life. It is a
non-negotiable aspect of life on Earth. The false flag threat of water pollution
(which is being committed by the global Elite through multi-national
corporations) is a cover story for the march toward complete control over all
basic necessities required to live.
Pursuit of water
security means whoever has the water, choses who lives – and who dies. With the
emergence of water regimes, land grabs where known aquifers reside underground
make sense. Workshops
designed to recruit more alarmists are popping up all over the academic
world as the global elites seek to convince as many scholars as possible that
the UN would be the best and only chance at fair allocation of our water
resources.
Simply put, the
"securitization" of water on a global scale (if the economic elites get their
way) will be run by the UN only. Their target recommendations will then be
directed to individual governments to be made into laws. The citizens of those
nations will have no choice but to follow the laws of their countries; if they
are to get their ration of life-giving water.
(global research)
Pakistan Cyber Force