Playing Politics with South Asian Water
The perception of insecurity in South Asia is today more marked than before, and water appears to be a key component of this new insecurity.
In the 1990s, water may become the key issue in the security debates in the Sub-continent for a number of reasons. First, the dam age potential of water-related calamities is on the rise. The frequency and intensity of natural disasters like flooding and drought, as well as of disasters induced by human activity such as waterlogging, salinity, pollution, and those arising from the interference with watercourses, have had a most telling effect on the region's economies and the morale of its peoples. The material damage and loss of life is so prohibitive in social and economic terms, that environmental insecurity is now a critical concern, acquiring a degree of political urgency the regional governments can no longer ignore.
Second, the drive for industrialisation will gain greater urgency throughout the Sub-continent, and it will require a relatively inexpensive and clean source of energy. The largely untapped hydroelectric potential of the Himalayan region could create the domestic energy substitute Nepal and Bhutan need so urgently to arrest deforestation, as well as provide export energy to the entire region; India's demand for electricity is estimated to grow more than 5,000 megawatt per annum in the coming decades.