Keeping it simple for water and climate

Keeping it simple for water and climate

Climate change, net zero, greenhouse gas, adaptation, resilience, mitigation…. climate messaging is bombarded by terms that can wash over without having much meaning for daily life.

But when you think back to school geography and the first time you encountered the term “climate”, you’ll remember how simple it is… it’s water!

A simple graphic depicting water evaporating from the land, forming clouds then raining into a river

Everything we feel about our climate comes down to water. Floods and droughts are obvious water effects, but even the recent heatwaves are linked to water. Imagine how humans cool down by sweating. When the earth is dry, heatwaves occur as there’s no cooling evaporation.

Water helps to stabilise our climate and helps reduce the effects of man made climate change in lots of ways. Here’s a few examples…

A spoonful of soil is a tiny little sponge

When soil has plenty of organic matter and water, it’s rich with life. A single teaspoon of rich soil contains more living organisms than there are people on Earth and is around 25% water.

Healthy soil acts like a sponge, safely storing moisture and cooling the surrounding air. But if it dries out completely, soil turns to crumbling dust, stops absorbing water, and releases its trapped carbon back into the atmosphere as a greenhouse gas. By keeping soil hydrated with natural rainwater harvesting trenches that allow water to slowly percolate, we protect a massive carbon-store and disaster protection force under our feet.

A tree is the ultimate A/C

An adult tree pumps hundreds of litres of water from the ground up into the sky every single day through its leaves. 

On a blazing hot day, a single large tree provides the same cooling effect as ten room-sized air conditioners running non-stop. When trees have enough fresh water, they physically cool down entire communities, protecting them from the worst of the heat.

A rural community can protect an entire landscape and its ecosystems

For communities in many parts of the world, water availability is the thin line between struggling or striving. 

When a village works together to restore and protect their water, it creates resilience for the nearby land and all its nature, not just human life. Instead of monsoon rains running off the land and causing natural disasters like floods and landslides, the landscape safely holds the water. In the summer months that stored water keeps taps flowing, local crops growing and cools the local air.

Water policy can be a national shield

When a government designs its water policy, a large part of decision making is choosing its strategy for mitigation (preventing worse climate change) and safety. 

If a country treats water as something to manage using pipes and pumps, it invites worse floods and hotter heatwaves. But if its policy focuses on capturing rainwater, cleaning rivers, and keeping landscapes hydrated, it creates a national shield. 

Good water policy means a country can hit its climate targets simply by letting nature do what it does best.

The big picture

Zoom out to the eight billion of us living on this planet. Every climate goal comes down to how we value and nurture water from securing enough food to preventing displacement of people and the conflicts that causes.

When we protect our shared water, we are actively fighting back. A hydrated planet grows more plants to suck up carbon, suffers fewer heatwaves, and keeps global temperatures more stable.

Find out about Frank Water's work here

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