Access to Freshwater Flashcards
How many people live without clean drinking water?
1.1 billion people live without clean drinking water
How many children died everyday from waterborne disease in 2004?
3,900
What is the daily per capita use of water in North America + Japan?
350litres
What is the daily per capita use of water in Sub-Saharan Africa?
20litres
How much water is needed to produce 1 kg of wheat, rice and beef?
Wheat = 1,000litres Rise = 1,400litres Beef = 13,000litres
How can we remove salt from water and what are the problems with this?
- 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
What proportion of the human population lives with some level of water scarcity?
40%
6 things humans use freshwater for
> Domestic purposes // drinking, cleaning
Agriculture // irrigation, for animals
Industry // manufacture, mining
Hydroelectric power
Transportation // ships on lakes+rivers
Marking boundaries between nation states
How much freshwater does Agenda 21 say humans should have access to daily?
40litres
What are aquifers?
- 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
Can aquifers be used sustainably?
- 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
What is the problem with irrigation?
- 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)
What is the problem with industries + electricity plants releasing warm water into rivers?
- 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
How can climate change increase inequality of freshwater supplies?
May disrupt rainfall patterns
Can even change monsoon rains
5 ways to increase freshwater supplies
> reservoirs > redistribution > desalinisation plants removing salt from seawater > rainwater harvesting systems > artificially recharging aquifers