ipl-logo

Privatization Of Water Essay

487 Words2 Pages

Today, population size has grown to over seven billion people, populating several continents across the globe, and constantly evolving and developing as interlocking systems. This planet, evolving less than one billion people over 200 years ago to now, quadruple times that, resulting in overpopulated regions and a lack in resources (Roser). In the film Water On The Table Liz Marshall uses individuals such as best-selling author, activist and public figure Maude Barlow, to highlight the global water crisis, and represent the battle against the privatization of water in Canada. The world is now more than ever in desperate need to preserve its natural resources such as water from pollution and corruption in order to provide equal supply to individuals …show more content…

Consequently, this signifies that the country does not generate enough revenue on the whole, or through its individual to support the privatization of water, if they are unable to pay for basic human needs such as sufficient health care. Water must be classified as a human right in order to ensure that its distribution reaches the worlds inhabitants globally and equally through its mutual ownership and prevision of every nation. Furthermore, the privatization of water, allows for transnational companies to gain monopoly over governments in terms of global control, creating personal gain to a small subset of the population benefiting from the rest. If the world allows groups to take care of the maintenance water systems for future generations simply because “the private sector has the resources to invest in these systems” (Marshall) indicates that our governments do not have the means necessary to deal with the grave issues plaguing our nation, and if so than should not be in charge of regulating control and power over its

Open Document