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Water lot of water?What physical and human factors
affect water supply?Is supply and demand balanced in
different parts of the world?
Human influences on water supply and demand
• Humans affect the hydrological cycle at many points of flows and storage:
Disruption of water cycle
Land use changes affect interception + infiltration + surface
storage;Eg urbanisation, deforestation
Water abstraction affects ground water storage, and can create salinisation and
salt water incursion
Flood management + dam construction affect channel flow +
storage
By Quantity( adding to or abstracting) or
Quality(pollution)
Graphs p 34 and 35 Pearson
• How is water used on a worldwide scale?
• How is water used in the UK?
• Blue water flow is the visible part of the hydrological system: surface flows and then recharging aquifers
• Green water flow is water intercepted, stored in soil and released by vegetation by evaporation and transpiration
• Grey water is polluted water Supply can be from: Surface sources groundwater sources In the UK 2/3 of supply is from surface and 1/3 from groundwater, with
regional variations.• Freshwater is effectively a finite resource since only about 1% of
freshwater is easily available for human use.• The water footprint indicates how much is required by consumers- and in
an increasingly globalised world, the footprint of someone in a country like the UK will not be just local as so many products using water will have been produced elsewhere!
The cost of everyday items….in litres of water.
One sheet of A4…One slice of bread…One apple..One cup of coffee..One pint of beer..One pair of leather shoes.. One packet of mixed saladOne bag of crisps..One litre of milk..One cotton tee-shirt..One pair of jeans..One 100g bar of chocolate..One glass of wine..
The cost of everyday items….in litres of water.
One sheet of A4…10One slice of bread…40One apple..70One cup of coffee..140One pint of beer..75One pair of leather shoes..16,600 One packet of mixed salad..50One bag of crisps..185One litre of milk..1000One cotton tee-shirt..2700-4000One pair of jeans..10,850One 100g bar of chocolate..2400One glass of wine..120
Some key definitions p 61 Oxford and p 37 Pearson
Domestic
Water shortage
low level of water supply relative to basic needs.
measured by annual renewable flows (in cubic metres) per head of population, or the number of people dependent on each unit of water
Water stress
often taken as less than 1700m3 per person per year
•growing conflict between users and competition for water• declining standards of reliability and service• harvest failures and food insecurity.
Water scarcity
supply of water per person falls below 1000m3/year
•an imbalance of supply and demand•a high rate of use compared to available supply, especially if the remaining supply is difficult or costly to tap.
Physical water scarcity
reached when 60% of river flows are diverted for agricultural, industrial & municipal purposes; globally over 75% is now used
Physical water scarcity is shown by:• Severe environmental degradation•Declining groundwater and water allocation which favours some groups over others.•Arid and semi-arid areas are most at risk
Economic water scarcity
when less than 25% of rivers are used, and there is abundant supply potential: water does not reach the poorest people
This is often due to political reasons and conflict: easiest to solve by low technology solutions: small dams, water harvesting from roof tops etc. It is targeted by NGOs like Water Aid
Thirst!
• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e-wD4RfkYms
Water Supply In India1.Monsoon Climate Due to the movement of the ITCZ
Little supply Dec – May
Monsoon June - Oct
Low Pressure due to the position of the ITCZ
High pressure due to descending air
2. Changing Discharge in the Ganges, Indus and Brahmaputra.
This varies seasonally due to the Monsoon and snow melting in the Himalayas
Ganges
Brahmaputra
Indus
3. Geology
Aquifers in the North = good water supply
Cherrapunji’s (in India)missing water?LO: Why can’t we have water everywhere?
Why?
Water scarcity isn’t just the fault of
people
Thinking
• http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2011-12-04/guwahati/30474076_1_drinking-water-water-resources-wettest-desert
What are the physical and human reasons that water is an issue in Cherrapunji, India?
Watch the clip and read the article…in pairs
• Complete a table of the physical reasons and human human reasons why water supply in Cherrapunji has changed
• Highlight where there are potential overlaps between the two columns.
• Decide which of the reasons is the strongest by scoring them in order (1 for most important, X for least important. The strongest reason gets the lowest score)
Factors affecting Cherrapunji
• Physical geography– Monsoon climate – variability– Saturation of ground – impervious– Climate change?
• Human Geography– Lack of dams – can’t harness variable supply– Aquaculture, NOT agriculture– Overpopultion
Yemen
• Sanaa, capital of Yemen, has no renewable water. At 2,300m above the sea, the city cannot use desalinated water and the only solution could be to move the capital.
• Read p 38 Pearson
UK water supply
Let’s examine the reasons for the variation in water demand and supply in the UK.
Estimated changes in demand for water 1990 - 2021
• Work out the estimated changes in different regions of the UK
• Show this on the map after discussing with your partner
• What are the advantages / disadvantages of the methods used?
Areas of water surplus /water deficit
Using a range of Atlas maps and information, annotate the outline map of the UK to help identify the reasons why there is a water surplus /deficit in the areas identified. Add as much detail as you can around your map.
Water resources and climate change?
• P 38 Pearson
The key players who affect the supply and demand for water?
The key players who affect the supply and demand for water?
• Water companies• Governments – national and state/local authority• UN, WTO and TNCS• Agriculture• Industry/business • Recreation/tourism• Domestic users• Charities• Nature conservation
California p 52-59 Oxford
Why are we doing this case study?
California p 52-59 Oxford
‘With reference to differing examples , explain how differing stakeholders views could lead to water conflict’ (15)
‘Referring to examples, assess the potential for water conflict in areas where demand exceeds supply’ (15)
1. Explain the physical controls on the supply of fresh water in California (think about the climate, river systems and aquifers etc )
2. How is human activity affecting the water availability in California?3. What are different key players likely views on the water issues in
California? 4. What are the environmental implications of supplying water to
California? 5. What are the economic implications of supplying water to California?
IN DETAIL
Why will conflict arise here ?
Hoover Dam
Phoenix – 1.5 million residents
7 states covered :Wyoming / Colorado
New Mexico / ArizonaCalifornia / Nevada
UtahLas Vegas 1.8 million
Mojave Desert
Salt water :Pacific Ocean and gulf of California
Colorado1 of the bread basket states
Glen Canyon Dam
History of the Colorado Basin• Colorado Compact 1922, allocated the water rights between the
different states• 1920’s ‘law of the River’ divided the river into the Upper basin
states, who had responsibility to supply the lower states• Over time new treaties have been signed and Mexico has also
been involved• Now there is a ‘giant plumbing system’, with more than 10 major
dams to give water to over 30 million people• Lots of the treaties were established in the 1920’s, since then
population, industry and climate here have all changed
Stakeholder and what they think including
specific detail
Farmers
City dwellers
Environmentalists
Indigenous groups
Mexican People
US federal Gov
Farmers
City Dwellers
Environmentalist and recreationists
Indigenous Groups
Mexican People
US federal Government
Complete the Conflict matrix, but also put in their opinions in detail in the first column
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