NAIROBI, Kenya — The United Nations and Kenyan officials on Wednesday announced the discovery of a potentially enormous underground supply of water, a find they said could improve the lives of generations of people in impoverished northern Kenya, if not the entire nation.
With water security a growing concern around the world, the discovery of
five aquifers in drought-plagued Turkana County could help secure
Kenya’s access to the most critical of natural resources, particularly
in the arid north.
Out of a population of roughly 41 million people, 17 million Kenyans
lack sufficient access to safe drinking water and 28 million are without
adequate sanitation, said the United Nations Educational, Scientific
and Cultural Organization, known as Unesco.
“This newly found wealth of water opens a door to a more prosperous
future for the people of Turkana and the nation as a whole,” Judi
Wakhungu, Kenya’s secretary for the environment, water and natural
resources, said in a Unesco statement
on Wednesday. “We must now work to further explore these resources
responsibly and safeguard them for future generations.”
In addition to potentially providing drinking water, the vast
underground supplies could be used as a source of irrigation for crops
or to water livestock. Malnutrition has been a growing problem among the
Turkana people, and a new supply of water could help head off conflicts
over scarce resources in the region, where deadly cattle raids are
common.
The finds were a product of cooperation between the Kenyan government
and Unesco, with the financial support of Japan. According to Unesco,
further study is needed to determine exactly how much water there is and
its quality. It also remains to be seen how easy and expensive tapping
the new supply will be.
The Lotikipi Basin Aquifer — which by one estimate is roughly the size
of Rhode Island — and the smaller Lodwar Basin Aquifer were discovered
using advanced satellite technology and confirmed with drilling. The
other three aquifers still need to be confirmed through drilling, Unesco
said.
Gretchen Kalonji, Unesco’s assistant director general for natural
sciences, said in the statement that the find “clearly demonstrates how
science and technology can contribute to industrialization and economic
growth, and to resolving real societal issues like access to water.”
Radar Technologies International, the natural resources exploration firm
that discovered the aquifers, said that they contained “a minimum reserve
of 250 billion cubic meters of water,” or about 66 trillion gallons,
and that rainfall in Kenya and Uganda refilled them with about 898
billion gallons annually.
Unesco described the find as a scientific triumph and one that it hoped
to replicate elsewhere. “We will continue to support Africa to unlock
the full potential of its invisible water wealth,” Ms. Kalonji said.
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