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Water: A Limited Resource

Water: A Limited Resource. Chapter 14. Domestic water in Lagos, Nigeria: in many less developed countries, access to safe, clean water use is limited and expensive. Poor residents of large towns often pay more for water than do the wealthy, spend a much larger fraction acquiring it

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Water: A Limited Resource

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  1. Water: A Limited Resource Chapter 14

  2. Domestic water in Lagos, Nigeria: in many less developed countries, access to safe, clean water use is limited and expensive. Poor residents of large towns often pay more for water than do the wealthy, spend a much larger fraction acquiring it And use part of their limited supply boiling it. Chapter 14Water: A Limited Resource

  3. Overview of Chapter 14 • Importance of Water • Hydrologic Cycle • Water Use and Resource Problems • Too Much Water • Too Little Water • Water Problems in US and Canada • Global Water Problems • Sharing Water Resources • Water Management • Providing Sustainable Water Supply • Water Conservation

  4. Importance of Water • Cooking • Washing • Use large amounts for: • Agriculture • Manufacturing • Mining • Moderates our climate • Allows organisms to survive • Energy production • Waste disposal • Use of freshwater is increasing

  5. Properties of Water • Composed of 2 Hydrogen and 1 oxygen • Exists as solid, liquid or gas • Polar • One end has (+) charge, one end has (-) charge • Forms Hydrogen bond between 2 water molecules • H-bonds define water’s physical properties • High heat capacity • High melt/freeze pt, high boil • Universal solvent • Adhesive and cohesive (cohesive sticks to other water molecule and adhesive is attaches to other surface)

  6. Hydrologic Cycle

  7. Major Water Compartments • Glaciers, Ice, and Snow • 2.6% of world’s water is classified fresh. • 0.5 % is groundwater • 0.014% readily accessible freshwater (lakes, rivers, groundwater). • As recently as 18,000 years ago, one-third of continental landmasses were covered by glacial ice sheets. • Now, Antarctic glaciers contain nearly 85% of all ice in the world. • Sea ice comes from ocean water, but salt is excluded during freezing.

  8. MAJOR WATER COMPARTMENTS Oceans • Together, oceans contain more than 97% of all liquid water in the world. • Contain 90% of world’s living biomass. • Moderate earth’s temperature. • Average residence time of water in the ocean is between 100 days to 3,000 years. (range)

  9. Major Water Compartments • Groundwater- water below the water table • Second largest reservoir of fresh water. • Infiltration - Process of water percolating through the soil and into fractures and permeable rocks. • Zone of Aeration - Upper soil layers that hold both air and water. • Zone of Saturation - Lower soil layers where all spaces are filled with water. • Water Table - Top of Zone of Sat.

  10. Major Water Compartments • Wetlands • Play a vital role in hydrologic cycle. • Lush plant growth stabilizes soil and retards surface runoff, allowing more aquifer infiltration. • Disturbance reduces natural water-absorbing capacity, resulting in floods and erosion in wet periods, and less water flow the rest of the year.

  11. WATER AVAILABILITY AND USE • Renewable Water Supplies • Made up of surface runoff and infiltration into accessible freshwater aquifers. • About two-thirds of water carried in rivers and streams annually occurs in seasonal floods too large or violent to be stored effectively for human use. • Readily accessible, renewable supplies are 400,000 gal/person/year.

  12. Major Water Compartments • The Atmosphere • Among the smallest water reservoirs. • Contains < 0.001% of total water supply. • Has most rapid turnover rate. • Provides mechanism for distributing fresh water over landmasses and replenishing terrestrial reservoirs.

  13. Freshwater Terminology • Surface water • Precipitation that remains on the surface and does not seep into soil • Runoff • Movement of surface water to lakes, rivers, etc. • Watershed (drainage basin) • Land area that delivers water into a stream or river system • Groundwater • Freshwater under the earth’s surface stored in aquifers • Aquifer • Underground caverns and porous layers of sand, gravel and rock in which groundwater is stored

  14. Distribution of Water • Only % of water on earth is freshwater • % is in the form of ice! • Only ~% of water on earth is available freshwater

  15. Properties of Water • Water is never completely pure in nature • Seawater • Many substances water dissolves cause water pollution

  16. Aquifers • In unconfined aquifers, the layers of rock above are porous and allow surface water directly above them to seep downward, replacing the aquifer content. The upper limit of an unconfined aquifer, below which the ground is saturated with water, is the water table. • A confined aquifer or artesian aquifer is a groundwater storage area between impermeable layers of rock. The water in a confined aquifer is trapped and is often under pressure. Its recharge area may be hundreds of kilometers away.

  17. Water use and Resource Problems • The greatest use of water worldwide is agriculture • Irrigation accounts for 71% of the world’s total consumption • Industry 20% • Domestic and Municipal use 9%

  18. Water Resource Problems • Three categories • Too much • Too little • Poor quality/contamination

  19. Too Much Water • Flooding • Both natural and human-induced • Modern floods are highly destructive because humans: • Remove water-absorbing plant cover from soil • Construct buildings on floodplains • Floodplain • Area bordering a river channel that has the potential to flood

  20. Role of Forests • Forests trap and absorb precipitation to provide nearby lowlands with some protection from floods. If woodlands are cut it can result in floods and also erosion. • What the soil cannot absorb, spill over its banks onto the flood plain. • When an area is developed for human use, much of the water-absorbing plant cover is removed. Buildings and paved roads do not absorb water so runoff is greater.

  21. Case in PointThe Floods of 1993 • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZIXioecWiJs • Refer also to page number 314 and 315 in your text book.

  22. Floodplain • Government restrictions on building • Levees can fail • Rather than rebuild levees adjacent to rivers, experts suggest allowing some flooding of floodplains during floods • (next slide)

  23. Left: Traditional levees adjacent to river Right: Suggested levee style, set back from river

  24. Recent Floods where • River cresting figures SLIDESHOW

  25. Too Little Water • Typically found in arid land • Problems • Drought • Overdrawing water for irrigation purposes • Aquifer depletion • Subsidence • Sinkholes Aquifer depletion from porous sediments causes subsidence or sinking of the land above it. Some areas of the San Joaquin Valley in California have sunk almost 10m. In the past 50 years. The limestone bedrock of Florida erodes as groundwater moves through it, sometimes causing a sinkhole, a large surface cavity or depression where an underground cave roof has collapsed. Saltwater intrusion occurs along coastal areas when groundwater is depleted faster than it recharges. Well water in these areas becomes too salty for human consumption.

  26. Too Little Water • Problems (continued) • Saltwater Intrusion

  27. Water Problems In US and Canada • US has a plentiful supply of freshwater • Many areas have a severe shortages because of • Geographical variations • Seasonal variations

  28. Water Problems in US and Canada • Water shortages in West and Southwest • Water is primarily used for irrigation, municipal, commercial and industrial uses. • Water is diverted and transported via aqueducts

  29. Mono Lake • Rivers and lakes that are largely formed from snowmelt in the Sierra Nevada Range replenish Mono Lake. • Mono lake is becoming saltier as water is removed by evaporation. • Beginning in 1941, much of the surface water that fed Mono Lake was diverted to Los Angeles 442 km away. As the water level dropped increased salinity adversely affected brine shrimp and alkali fly population. This in turn affected the bird population which fed on the shrimp and flies. • Dust storm from the exposed lakebed began to pose health hazard and violation of federal air pollution standards.

  30. Mono lake

  31. Solution –Mono Lake Problem • A court order halted water diversions from Mono Lake in 1989, and in 1994, the state of California worked out an agreement on Mono Lake- less water will be diverted to Los Angeles, and Mono Lake will be allowed to return to about 72% of its original volume. • The city of Los Angeles is using state funds to develop water conservation and reclaimed water projects to replace water supplies from Mono lake.

  32. Colorado River Basin

  33. Colorado River Basin • Provides water for 27-million people • Numerous dams for Hydropower • As a result of diversion for irrigation and other uses in the United States, the Colorado river Usually dries up before reaching the Gulf of California in Mexico. • The lower Colorado is increasingly saltier as it flows toward Mexico. • Colorado River no longer reaches ocean • In 2003 California agreed to withdraw no more water from the Colorado river than the Colorado River Compact Permits.

  34. Delaware: A State without water? • Delaware has no water source that originate within its boundaries and no major lake to serve its inhabitants. It shares Christina River Basin, which provides water for both Newark and Wilmington, with parts of Pennsylvania and Maryland. There are restriction as to how much water can be withdrawn from Christina River Basin. • Conservation-based pricing: water supply pricing structures that reward consumers for using less water. these often come in the form of low prices for water use up to some level, and stepped up prices as use increases.

  35. Water Problems in US and Canada-Groundwater • Aquifer Depletion

  36. Aquifer depletion • In certain areas of Louisiana and Texas, removal of too much groundwater resulted in intrusion of salt water from the Gulf of Mexico. • Saltwater intrusion from the Pacific Ocean has occurred along parts of the California coast, along coastal areas of Puget Sound in Washington State and in certain areas of Hawaii. • Florida and Northeast and Mid-Atlantic states also have saltwater intrusion.

  37. Ogallala Aquifer • Farmers on the High Plains rely on water from the Ogallala aquifer the largest groundwater deposit in the world.. • In some areas farmers are drawing water from the Ogallala Aquifer 40 times faster than nature replaces it, which has lowered the water table more than 30 m. in these places higher pumping costs have made it too expensive to irrigate. • Population decline as farms fail during dry spells

  38. Global Water Problems • Amount of freshwater on planet CAN meet human needs • BUT, it is unevenly distributed and some places lack stable runoff • Problems: • Climate Change • Drinking Water • Population Growth • Sharing Water Resources Among Countries • Stable run off: the share runoff from precipitation that can be depended on every month and is low in India.

  39. Water and Climate Change • Climate change affects the type and distribution of precipitation. It is expected to increase in some areas while it drops in others. • Potential issues: • Reduced snowfall will impact water resources downstream • Sea level rise will cause saltwater intrusion into drinking water supplies

  40. Drinking Water Problems • Many developing countries have insufficient water to meet drinking and household needs • Population Growth and water problems • Increase in population means an increase in freshwater requirements • Limits drinking water available • Limits water available for agriculture (food)

  41. Sharing Water Resources Among Countries • Rhine River Basin (right) • Countries upstream discharged pollutants into river • Countries downstream had to pay to clean the water before they could drink it • In 1950 the five countries(France, Switzerland, Luxemburg, Germany and Netherlands) formed the International Commission for Protection of the Rhine (ICPR) to deal with water issues related to the Rhine River.

  42. Contd.. • In 1986 a severe chemical spill in Switzerland dumped 30 tons of dyes herbicides, fungicides, insecticides and mercury into the river. the spill galvanized the ICPR, which initiated a 15-year Rhine Action Plan. • As a result long-absent fishes have returned to the river, including Atlantic Salmon which returned in 1990 after a 30-year absence. ICPR is now working on bank restoration, flood control, and cleaning up remaining polutants.

  43. Aral Sea • Water diversion for irrigation has caused sea to become too saline • The Soviet Union diverted water from Amy Darya and the Syr Darya –1950 • In 1960 the Aral sea, once the largest freshwater lake, declined in area and the total volume is down by 80% its biological diversity disappeared. • Health problems-tuberculosis to anemia, kidney disease and cancers.

  44. Aral Sea 1967 1997 As water was diverted fro irrigation, the sea level subsided.

  45. Potentially Volatile International Water Situations • Mekong River Basin shared between Pakistan and India. • India and Bangladesh quarrel over the Ganges river. • Slovakia and Hungary both depend on the Danube River.

  46. Jordan River • It supplies water to Israel, Jordan, the West Bank, and Gaza Strip. Water use is increasing because of population growth and economic activity in the region, • Differential access between Israeli settlers on the West Bank, who use four to five times as much water as do neighboring Palestinians, may be a significant source of conflict.

  47. Nile River • Egypt uses most of the Nile’s water even though 10 nations share the Nile River Basin. Ethiopia and Sudan are expanding their use of the Nile River’s flow to meet the demands of their supply at a time when its population is increasing. • The United Nations engineered an international water-use agreement among the Nile River countries to help diffuse this potentially dangerous water situation.

  48. Water Management • Main Goal: Provide sustainable supply of high-quality water • Requires humans to use resource carefully • Dams and Reservoirs • Water Diversion Projects • Desalinization • Seeding Clouds • Condensation Nuclei (addition of chemicals) • Towing Icebergs • Cost

  49. Dams and Reservoirs • Benefits: • Ensure year-round supply of water with regulated flow • Generate electricity • Provide recreational activities • Disadvantages • Alter the ecosystem • Reduce sediment load

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