Topic 4. Water Resource
Topic 4. Water Resource
Topic 4. Water Resource
Global Overview
While 67% of Earth’s surface is covered by
water, only less than 2.7% of global water
is freshwater. Most of the freshwater
(2.05%) are locked in ice caps and glaciers.
Only less than 0.7% is available for human
use.
Over two thirds of the
earth's surface is covered
with water, 97.2% of which
is contained in the five
oceans. The Antarctic ice
sheet, containing 90% of all
fresh water on the planet, is
visible at the bottom.
Atmospheric water vapour
can be seen as clouds,
contributing to the earth's
albedo.
Iceberg and Polar cap store most of the fresh water
on Earth
Volume of water stored in
the water cycle's reservoirs
Reservoir Volume of water Percent
(106 km³) of total
Ocean 1370 97.25
Ice caps & glaciers 29 2.05
Groundwater 9.5 0.68
Lakes 0.125 0.01
Soil Moisture 0.065 0.005
Atmosphere 0.013 0.001
Streams & rivers 0.0017 0.0001
Biosphere 0.0006 0.00004
Scarcity of fresh water
On a global basis, fresh water is a
increasingly scarce resource. It is partially
caused by increasing population coupled by
change of consumption pattern and climate
changes.
Water consumption for food
production (I)
Meat production use a lot of water when
compared to growing food crops.
A shift in food consumption pattern toward
more meat consumption will cause a
substantial increase in water consumption.
Water consumption for food
production (II)
Competing water uses (I)
Competing water uses (II)
Industrialized / developed countries tend to
use more water in their industrial
production.
Other countries tend to use more water for
agricultural uses.
Fresh Water supply
Problems related to Water crisis
Inadequate access to safe drinking water by
over 1.1 billion people
Groundwater overdrafting leading to
diminished agricultural yields
Overuse and pollution of water resources
harming biodiversity
Regional conflicts over scarce water
resources sometimes resulting in warfare.
Threats to fresh water resources
Climate change causes change in
frequencies of droughts and floods.
Depletion of aquifers caused by over-
consumption as a result of population
growth.
Pollution and contamination by sewage,
agricultural and industrial runoff.
Distribution of population and
water resources
Pressure of freshwater ecosystem
Fresh Water Outlook
Estimated from existing data, some
countries are going to experience serious
shortage of fresh water supply in the
coming 20 years time.
China, India and South Africa and Middle
East countries may among the most
adversely affected countries.
Desalination of sea water as
fresh water supply
Desalination of sea water can be done either
via distillation or membrane process.
Both process requires large amount of
energy and thus costly, which means
desalination remains an expensive option
for providing reliable fresh water supply,
restricted to only economically well-off
countries.
“The wars of the next century will be about
water" World Bank vice-president Ismail
Serageldin(quoted in New York Times, 10
August 1995).
Transboundary dispute
TRANSBOUNDARY DISPUTE
Transboundary dispute
Privatisation
PRIVATISATION
Tehri Dam
Displacing populations
Estimate: 40-80M displaced by dams.
(10M reported in China; 1.5M for Three Gorges)
Usually poor/indigenous people who leave behind
productive farms and ancestral homes. They
rarely receive benefits of the project.
Results in conflicts, social problems, cultural loss,
economic disaster
Although people starting building dams thousands of years ago, technology for large dams didn’t evolve until the 19th century
Today….
60% of the world’s rivers are dammed
There are ~ 45,000 large dams (>15m high) and over 1500 under construction
There are ~ 800,000 smaller dams
Volume: 10,000 km3 (5x vol of all river water)
Have Dams Achieved their purpose?
Dams have saved countless millions of lives from
floods
30%-40% of 271 million hectares of irrigated lands
worldwide rely on dams
Dams contribute water to 12-16% of the world’s
food production
India has been self-sufficient in food production
since 1974 due to irrigation from reservoirs
Have Dams Achieved their purpose?
Hydropower provides 19% of world’s electric supply
(low greenhouse gas emissions)
– 13% in US (92,000 MW= 500 barrels oil or 150 coal plants;
prevents 200 million tons of CO2;
85-90% efficient compared to 50% for gas turbines)
– 99% in Norway
– 75% in New Zealand
– 70% in Latin America
But there are serious objections to dams and
problems to overcome
Large populations need to be resettled
Economic benefits are often not achieved
Dams harm the environment
Water is lost through evaporation and seepage
Dams fill with sediment and change the
geomorphology of the river
Dams have a life that ends… then what?
Dams can be unsafe; have killed thousands
Environmental Issues
- ecological problems
- financial problems
DEVASTATING FLOODS IN ASSAM
STATE, INDIA