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The Geopolitics of Water: A Rising Concern

Why water is increasingly seen as a geopolitical risk

Freshwater is essential for life, food production, energy generation, industry, and ecosystem services. Yet the global distribution of accessible freshwater is limited and uneven. Only about 2.5% of the planet’s water is freshwater, and a very small fraction of that—roughly 0.3% of total global water—is readily accessible on the surface for human use. At the same time, population growth, urbanization, changing diets, and economic development are driving rising demand. Climate change, shrinking glaciers, groundwater depletion, pollution, and deteriorating infrastructure are reducing supply reliability. These forces combine to elevate water from a local resource management issue to a source of transboundary tension and strategic competition.

Key drivers turning water into a geopolitical risk

  • Scarcity and uneven distribution: Freshwater is geographically concentrated. River basins and aquifers cross national borders, creating dependency relationships among upstream and downstream states.
  • Population growth and urbanization: More people concentrated in cities increase municipal and industrial demand, often in basins already stressed by agriculture.
  • Agriculture and the water footprint: Agriculture consumes roughly 70% of global freshwater withdrawals, tying food security to water security. Countries dependent on irrigation are vulnerable to both domestic shortages and upstream controls.
  • Climate change: Altered precipitation patterns, more extreme droughts and floods, and accelerating glacier melt change seasonal river flows and make supply less predictable.
  • Groundwater depletion: Intensive pumping from major aquifers (for example, the North China Plain, Indo-Gangetic Basin, and the Ogallala) is lowering water tables and reducing long-term resilience.
  • Water quality degradation: Pollution from agriculture, industry, and untreated sewage reduces usable water, increasing competition for clean supplies.
  • Infrastructure and investment gaps: Aging or absent dams, treatment plants, and delivery systems make states vulnerable to service disruptions and create opportunities for political leverage through project financing.

Transboundary rivers and basins: flashpoints and examples

States upstream can alter timing and quantity of flows; downstream states depend on predictable inflows. Several high-profile cases illustrate how water influences diplomacy, tension, and risk:

  • Nile basin: Ethiopia’s Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) on the Blue Nile has sparked prolonged friction with downstream Egypt and Sudan concerning water distribution and release protocols during droughts, drawing international mediation and highlighting the vulnerabilities faced by countries dependent on consistent flows for essential irrigation and hydropower.
  • Mekong River: China’s upstream dam network and expanding hydropower sector have reshaped seasonal water cycles and fisheries across Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, and Thailand, with diminished dry-season flows and disrupted sediment movement threatening livelihoods and food production in the Mekong Delta.
  • Tigris and Euphrates: Turkey’s extensive dam construction under the Southeastern Anatolia Project has intensified pressure on relations with Syria and Iraq, where farming systems and marshland habitats depend heavily on managed downstream flows.
  • Indus Basin: The Indus Waters Treaty between India and Pakistan has weathered multiple periods of strain between the two nuclear-armed states, illustrating both the stabilizing power of formal accords and their fragility when broader geopolitical tensions rise.
  • Jordan River and the Levant: Persistent scarcity and uneven distribution continue to aggravate Israeli-Palestinian and regional disputes, with access to water intertwined with broader political challenges.
  • Lake Chad and the Sahel: The sharp decline of Lake Chad driven by climate fluctuations and increased withdrawals has deepened economic hardship and contributed to localized conflict and displacement.

Water as a driver of geopolitical influence and a potential security vulnerability

Water may be intentionally or unintentionally employed as a means of influence in political affairs and conflict:

  • Upstream infrastructure as leverage: Dams and reservoirs give upstream countries the ability to regulate both the release schedule and the volume of water, allowing them to exert bargaining pressure or apply coercive tactics during moments of instability.
  • Resource-based migration and displacement: Declining access to local water supplies pushes populations to relocate and move into cities, burdening host areas and heightening cross-border tensions.
  • Violence and local conflicts: Rivalry over water sources and arable terrain can ignite communal clashes, enable insurgent recruitment, and foster criminal activity, as observed in portions of the Sahel, East Africa, and South Asia.
  • Economic coercion and trade restrictions: During periods of scarcity, governments might curb exports of crops or other water‑intensive goods, triggering global food‑price volatility and diplomatic strain.
  • Infrastructure sabotage and cyber threats: Water networks remain exposed to both physical assaults and digital breaches capable of polluting supplies or halting distribution. Documented cyberattacks on treatment and delivery facilities underscore an emerging security challenge for nations.

Economic and strategic dimensions

Water interacts with energy and food systems in ways that heighten geopolitical implications:

  • Water-energy-food nexus: Hydropower, thermoelectric cooling, and biofuel production all require water. Decisions in one sector affect the others and can trigger transboundary impacts. For example, hydropower expansion upstream can reduce irrigation water downstream during dry seasons, creating trade-offs between energy and food security.
  • Virtual water trade: Countries can effectively import water by importing water-intensive crops and goods. Export restrictions during shortages can therefore become geopolitical tools that affect food-importing states.
  • Investment and influence: Financing and building large water projects—dams, desalination plants, pipelines—can create dependencies and extend geopolitical influence. External actors, state-owned enterprises, and private corporations that control infrastructure can shape regional alignments.

Governance, law, and institutional gaps

International law provides structures for collaboration, yet shortcomings and limited enforcement leave systems exposed:

  • Legal instruments are uneven: The UN Convention on the Law of the Non-Navigational Uses of International Watercourses provides principles like equitable and reasonable use and no-harm obligations, but not all states are parties, and many basins lack binding, comprehensive agreements.
  • Data sharing and transparency: Cooperative management depends on shared monitoring and forecasting. Where data are withheld, mistrust grows and the risk of miscalculation rises.
  • Institutional capacity: Weak water institutions, underfunded basin organizations, and fragmented governance within countries impede conflict prevention and cooperative responses to variability.

Technological responses and their limits

Advances can reduce some risks, but introduce new dynamics:

  • Desalination and reuse: Desalination delivers a dependable freshwater source for coastal regions, while reclaimed water helps bolster overall supply reliability. Nonetheless, desalination often demands high energy use, incurs substantial costs, and may harm ecosystems if brine disposal is poorly handled.
  • Improved irrigation and efficiency: Modernizing agricultural practices can curb water consumption, though it calls for financial investment, institutional adjustments, and at times shifts in crop selection that may lead to social and economic impacts.
  • Remote sensing and data tools: Satellite technologies and other remote-sensing platforms (including gravity-based methods for tracking aquifer decline) enhance the identification of water stress, yet they do not necessarily foster collaborative management.
  • Cybersecurity and infrastructure hardening: Safeguarding water infrastructure from cyber threats and deliberate damage is vital, but numerous utilities lack the funding and specialized knowledge required to establish strong protective measures.

Paths to reduce geopolitical risk

While risks are rising, there are proven strategies that limit escalation and promote stability:

  • Strengthen basin-wide institutions: Establishing solid legal, technical, and financial frameworks for shared management lowers uncertainty and offers structured avenues for distributing mutual gains.
  • Promote transparency and data sharing: Sharing real-time flow metrics, coordinating monitoring efforts, and deploying early-warning tools foster trust and curb the likelihood of misjudgments.
  • Incentivize cooperative infrastructure: Developing projects that deliver collective advantages—such as hydropower systems that secure downstream flows or regional water‑storage solutions—helps synchronize stakeholder priorities.
  • Invest in demand management: Measures like water pricing, leak prevention, efficient irrigation, and urban conservation ease stress on limited resources.
  • Integrate water into foreign policy and security planning: Diplomatic coordination, dedicated water diplomacy expertise, and embedding water-related risks within national security reviews can avert unexpected crises.
  • Support adaptive, climate-aware planning: Employing scenario planning, implementing flexible reservoir operation guidelines, and considering ecological flow needs bolster resilience amid climate fluctuations.

Water’s growing geopolitical relevance arises from the tight intersection of limited usable supplies, expanding and shifting consumption patterns, climate-driven volatility, and intricate transboundary water systems; where institutional capacity, openness, and shared gains remain fragile, water can serve as a tool of power, fuel local unrest, and intensify frictions between states, while robust cooperative frameworks, technologies that curb demand and enhance resilience, and diplomacy focused on fair, benefit-centered outcomes can recast water from a source of discord into a foundation for joint action, making it essential to adopt integrated strategies that link development, security, trade, and climate adaptation, since without such coordinated efforts, water-related disruptions will increasingly influence geopolitical dynamics and regional stability.

By Janeth Sulivan

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