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GCSE/Geography/OCR

P2.SC.1Global resource use: water, food and energy demand; uneven distribution

Notes

Global resource use: water, food and energy security

OCR J383 Paper 2 tests global resource management with case-study and evaluate questions. You need to understand why demand for water, food and energy is rising AND why access is unevenly distributed between HICs and LICs.

Key concepts

Resource security: the ability of a country to guarantee a stable supply of a resource to meet its population's needs.

  • Water security: reliable access to sufficient clean water.
  • Food security: reliable access to sufficient nutritious food.
  • Energy security: reliable access to affordable energy for domestic, industrial and transport needs.

Water

Global demand and supply patterns

  • 2.97 billion people face water insecurity for at least one month per year (2021 estimate).
  • Global freshwater use has increased 6× in the 20th century (population growth + agriculture + industry).
  • Agriculture accounts for ~70% of global freshwater withdrawals (primarily irrigation).

Why water is unevenly distributed

High water availabilityLow water availability
Amazon Basin, Congo Basin, SE Asia (high rainfall)Middle East, North Africa, sub-Saharan Sahel
Canada, Norway (large glaciers/rivers)Australia's interior (aridity)
  • Physical factors: rainfall patterns, river systems, groundwater stores.
  • Human factors: infrastructure (dams, pipelines), pollution, governance, affordability.

Water scarcity types

TypeCause
Physical scarcityNot enough water in the environment (arid regions)
Economic scarcityWater exists but cannot be accessed (lack of money/infrastructure) — common in sub-Saharan Africa

Case study — Cape Town, South Africa: 2018 "Day Zero" near-crisis. Three-year drought + population growth + failing infrastructure → Cape Town's reservoirs fell to 13.5% capacity. Averted through emergency 50L/person/day water restrictions. Lesson: even a relatively wealthy city can face water crisis under climate + governance pressures.

Food

Demand trends

  • Global food demand projected to increase 50–60% by 2050 (population growth + rising meat consumption in NEEs).
  • Meat production is highly water- and land-intensive: 1 kg beef = 15,400 litres of water.
  • Food waste: globally, 1/3 of food produced is lost or wasted (FAO, 2019).

Why food insecurity is uneven

  • Sub-Saharan Africa: 282 million chronically food insecure (2023). Causes: drought, conflict, land degradation, poverty.
  • HIC: food security generally high but increasing food bank use (UK: 3 million food bank parcels distributed 2023).
  • Calorie gap: average daily intake 3,400 kcal in HICs vs ~2,100 kcal in LICs.

The food-water-energy nexus

  • Nexus: water, food and energy are deeply interconnected — you cannot address one without affecting the others.
  • Producing food requires water (irrigation) and energy (farming machinery, fertiliser production).
  • Producing energy requires water (hydroelectric, thermal cooling) and land (biofuels).
  • Managing water requires energy (pumping, desalination).
  • A resource-secure future requires managing all three together.

Energy

Demand trends

  • Global energy consumption increased 55% between 1990 and 2020.
  • Fastest growth: China, India — rapid industrialisation and rising living standards.
  • Slowest growth / decline: EU and USA — energy efficiency improvements.

Energy mix and security

Energy sourceShare of global primary energy (~2022)Key issue
Oil31%Geopolitically sensitive; finite
Coal27%Largest GHG emitter; declining in HICs
Natural gas24%"Bridge fuel"; still fossil
Renewables (all)14%Growing rapidly; intermittent
Nuclear4%Low-carbon; radioactive waste
  • Energy poverty: 760 million people lack access to electricity (mostly sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia).
  • Energy mix in LICs: biomass (wood, charcoal) dominates → deforestation, indoor air pollution (4 million deaths/year from cooking fires — WHO).

Why energy access is uneven

  • Physical: fossil fuel deposits are geographically concentrated (Middle East oil/gas, Australia coal).
  • Economic: HIC can afford to import and transition to renewables; LIC cannot afford grid infrastructure.
  • Political: energy is a tool of geopolitical power (Russia-Europe gas dependence, highlighted by Ukraine conflict 2022).

Sustainable resource management

  • Water: drip irrigation (50–70% less water than flood irrigation); rainwater harvesting; desalination (expensive but growing).
  • Food: reduce food waste; shift toward plant-based diets; precision farming (sensor-guided irrigation).
  • Energy: renewable transition; energy efficiency; decentralised solar (especially for LIC rural access).

Common OCR exam mistakes

  1. Confusing physical and economic water scarcity — sub-Saharan Africa often has physical water AND economic scarcity; Middle East has physical scarcity.
  2. Forgetting the nexus link — water, food and energy cannot be managed independently; exam questions often explicitly ask about connections.
  3. Saying renewables immediately solve energy security — they address climate change but can create new security issues (e.g. cobalt for batteries, lithium for EVs — both concentrated in politically unstable regions).

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Practice questions

Try each before peeking at the worked solution.

  1. Question 14 marks

    Physical vs economic water scarcity

    Explain the difference between physical and economic water scarcity, using examples. [4 marks]

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-geography

  2. Question 24 marks

    Water-food-energy nexus

    Explain the connection between water, food and energy as resources. Use examples. [4 marks]

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-geography

  3. Question 34 marks

    Why food demand is rising

    Explain two reasons why global demand for food is increasing. [4 marks]

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  4. Question 48 marks

    Evaluate strategies for water security

    Evaluate the effectiveness of strategies used to improve water security. [8 marks]

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Flashcards

P2.SC.1 — Global resource use — water, food and energy demand; uneven global distribution; water security, food security, energy security

10-card SR deck for OCR Geography A (J383) topic P2.SC.1

10 cards · spaced repetition (SM-2)