The Coming Great Thirst
The world did not end with fire. It ended with thirst.
Joe remembered the news clippings from when he was younger, the ones few people cared about at the time. Bolivia, year 2000—Bechtel Corporation had bought the rain. They called it “water privatization,” but to the peasants in Cochabamba it meant soldiers beating old women for catching rain in buckets. The government had signed away the sky itself. The revolt was crushed, but the precedent was set.
“That was the first taste,” Joe said to Nelly as they walked along the dry stone streets of Split. “They told the Bolivians: the water in the ground, the water in the clouds—it’s not yours. It belongs to the corporation.”
Nelly’s steps slowed. “And no one stopped them.”
“No one stopped them,” Joe echoed. “Because the world thought it was far away. Just another poor country. But Nestlé was watching. They saw the future in that contract.”
By 2030, Nestlé had become more powerful than many nations. They owned aquifers in Africa, the Alps, even under Canadian First Nations reserves. Every spring that bubbled from rock was branded, bottled, sold back at a hundredfold profit. Governments indebted to them looked the other way.
But desalination—pulling fresh water from the ocean—was a threat to their empire. Joe had seen the reports, patents locked away, inventors silenced. A Saudi engineer found floating in his pool. A Chilean startup swallowed up and buried. The sea itself had been declared “strategic territory” by Nestlé-backed governments.
“They’ll never let us drink the ocean,” Joe said bitterly. “Because then their plastic bottles would be worthless. They’ll keep us thirsty enough to pay, but not enough to revolt. That’s the balance of power now.”
Nelly gazed out over the Adriatic. It glittered like an impossible promise. “And if the rains stop coming?”
“They already are,” Joe replied. “California. Brazil. The Sahel. Even here, the wells are dropping. The rivers are turning to sand. They call it climate change, but I call it managed scarcity. They’re letting the world dry out, so the people will beg for the bottle.”
He told her about the secret maps Nestlé kept: charts of remaining glaciers, of ancient aquifers deep under bedrock. Each marked with a red circle. Each a future conquest.
“And what happens when the last aquifer is drained?” Nelly asked.
Joe looked at her, his voice steady but grim. “Then the world learns what Bolivia already knew. You can’t privatize the sky. And when people finally realize that truth, it won’t just be protests. It’ll be wars.”
A silence fell between them. The sea hissed against the rocks as if mocking their thirst.
Joe clenched his fists. “We’ll need to build in secret. A desalination system that can’t be patented, can’t be shut down. Distributed, shared, unstoppable. Before the Great Thirst becomes the law of every land.”
Nelly nodded, her eyes glinting with the weight of prophecy. “A new water commons,” she whispered. “The people’s ocean.”
The waves thundered against the shore, and for a moment, Joe imagined them rising—not as a threat, but as salvation.