riverlandscape

“Water Scarcity, Food Production, and Virtual Water” (Part 1)

Interview conducted by Dale Whittington and Duncan A. Thomas

This policy note presents an interview with Tony Allan, examining the interconnections between water scarcity, food production, and international trade through the concept of virtual water. Allan explains how water-scarce countries can improve water security by importing food and other water-intensive products rather than relying solely on domestic water resources. The discussion challenges traditional assumptions that water shortages inevitably lead to conflict, arguing instead that global trade functions as an effective mechanism for redistributing water embedded in agricultural commodities. 

The interview highlights the importance of political, economic, and institutional factors in water management and emphasizes that solutions to water scarcity extend beyond engineering and hydrological interventions. Allan’s insights provide a broader understanding of global food systems, resource governance, and the role of trade in addressing environmental constraints, offering valuable perspectives for policymakers concerned with sustainable water and food security.

Invited Opinion Interview with Professor Tony Allan – Part 2

In Part 2 of the interview, Tony Allan expands on the implications of the virtual water concept for global food security, international trade, and water governance. He argues that water scarcity should be understood within broader political and economic systems rather t…

Invited Opinion Interview with Professor Tony Allan – Part 1

This policy note presents an interview with Tony Allan, examining the interconnections between water scarcity, food production, and international trade through the concept of virtual water. Allan explains how water-scarce countries can improve water security by importin…

Tony Allan – An Intellectual Journey

This book follows Tony Allan’s journey through the maze of water management and global awareness of the risks of mismanagement, tracing the trajectory of the hydraulic mission from a time of infinite possibilities—fiat panis and piped water—to risk aversion, loss …

Camels Don’t Fly, Deserts Don’t Bloom: an Assessment of Saudi Arabia’s Experiment in Desert Agriculture

Severe arid conditions constrained agricultural production and population size in the Arabian Peninsula over the millennia (except around oases and in parts of Yemen). An abrupt change in Saudi Arabia started in the 1980s to make the desert bloom.

This study examines w…

The Household Water Crisis in Syria’s Greater Damascus Region

Damascus has experienced prolonged daily water shut-offs, particularly between June and January, with rationing reaching up to 20 hours per day in 2001.

This study addresses the ongoing domestic water crisis in the Greater Damascus Region within the context of Syria…

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