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Water conflicts and cooperation

IB Environmental Systems and Societies • Unit 4

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Water conflicts and cooperation

Big idea: As freshwater becomes more valuable, it can cause conflict between nations, regions, and users — or it can drive cooperation through treaties and shared management. The outcome depends on governance and political will.

Why water causes conflict

  • Rivers cross international borders (e.g., Nile, Jordan, Mekong)
  • Upstream countries control downstream supply
  • Increasing demand from population growth
  • Climate change making supply less predictable
  • Water needed for agriculture, industry, and drinking — competing uses

Examples of water disputes

  • Nile River — Egypt, Sudan, Ethiopia dispute over Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam
  • Jordan River — Israel, Jordan, Palestine, Syria, Lebanon
  • Indus River — India and Pakistan (Indus Waters Treaty 1960)
  • Colorado River — USA and Mexico, also US states compete

Cooperation and solutions

  • International treaties — legal agreements on water sharing
  • Joint management bodies — shared governance of river basins
  • Water markets — trading water rights
  • Virtual water trade — importing water-intensive products instead of growing them
  • Technology sharing — efficient irrigation, desalination
In evaluative essays, explain why freshwater value is increasing, then use named case studies to show both conflict and cooperation. Finish with a balanced judgement about when cooperation is more likely than conflict (for example: strong treaties, shared benefits, and effective governance).

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