Access to Freshwater Flashcards

1
Q

How many people live without clean drinking water?

A

1.1 billion people live without clean drinking water

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2
Q

How many children died everyday from waterborne disease in 2004?

A

3,900

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3
Q

What is the daily per capita use of water in North America + Japan?

A

350litres

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4
Q

What is the daily per capita use of water in Sub-Saharan Africa?

A

20litres

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5
Q

How much water is needed to produce 1 kg of wheat, rice and beef?

A
Wheat = 1,000litres
Rise = 1,400litres
Beef = 13,000litres
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6
Q

How can we remove salt from water and what are the problems with this?

A
  • Desalinisation plants
  • Energy costs are large
  • Only currently possible in water-stressed wealthy countries near the sea e.g Israel
  • Salt is a by-product + is often returned to ocean, increasing density of water which then sinks + damages ocean-bottom ecosystems
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7
Q

What proportion of the human population lives with some level of water scarcity?

A

40%

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8
Q

6 things humans use freshwater for

A

> Domestic purposes // drinking, cleaning
Agriculture // irrigation, for animals
Industry // manufacture, mining
Hydroelectric power
Transportation // ships on lakes+rivers
Marking boundaries between nation states

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9
Q

How much freshwater does Agenda 21 say humans should have access to daily?

A

40litres

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10
Q

What are aquifers?

A
  • An aquifer is a layer of porous rock (holds water) sandwiched between 2 layers of impermeable rock
  • Continuously filled by infiltration of precipitation where porous rock reaches surface, but this only in limited areas
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11
Q

Can aquifers be used sustainably?

A
  • Water flow in aquifers is v slow and so they are often used unsustainably
  • Many aquifers are ‘fossil aquifers’ meaning the recharge source is no longer exposed at surface so can never be refilled. These can never be used sustainably
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12
Q

What is the problem with irrigation?

A
  • Irrigation often results in soil degradation
  • Much of water used in irrigation evaporates before its absorbed by crops
  • Dissolved minerals remain in top layer of the soil making it too saline for further agriculture (salinisation)
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13
Q

What is the problem with industries + electricity plants releasing warm water into rivers?

A
  • Warm water holds less dissolved oxygen than cold water
  • So aquatic organisms that take their oxygen from water (fish) are negatively affected
  • Warm water outflow from power stations changes the species composition in the water

SO USE COOLING TOWERS

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14
Q

How can climate change increase inequality of freshwater supplies?

A

May disrupt rainfall patterns

Can even change monsoon rains

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15
Q

5 ways to increase freshwater supplies

A
> reservoirs
> redistribution
> desalinisation plants removing salt from seawater
> rainwater harvesting systems 
> artificially recharging aquifers
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16
Q

3 ways to reduce amounts of freshwater used

A

> reduce domestic use by using more water-efficient showers, dishwashers, toilets
wash cars in car washes w closed water system// also reduces pollution by oil
grey-water recycling// water from showers, baths etc can be used in garden irrigation + toilets

17
Q

How to reduce problems caused by irrigation

A
  • selecting drought resistant crops can reduce need for irrigation (some areas may be unsuitable for growing crops, graze cattle instead)
  • trickle systems instead of spraying water to reduce evaporation