Water case study: The water problems of the Beijing-Tianjin region Flashcards
1
Q
Context
A
Beijing may soon run out of water
Each year gap widens between demand and supply -
wells drying up, groundwater and rivers becoming polluted = ground subsidence worsening
2
Q
Why are there water problems in this region?
A
- Physical = Beijing location means it is prone to flood + recent years drought - numerous dry years can occur/ Most precipitation in July and September, sometimes more than half of it in 3 days
- Human = 16 mil people live in Beijing, 11mil in Tianjin = huge demand for water + increase in rural-urban migration could make things worse. But growth still 2.5% annually.
3
Q
Water supply in the region
A
- Beijing draws 60% of water supply from aquifers = overexploited but water quality is acceptable
- In the 1970s and 80s increased droughts lead to increased demands for irrigation water=lowered water table by 40 m=Beijing subsidised between 0.5m and 1m per year
- Tianjin relies on groundwater for about 30% of water supply, but salt water incursion makes the water brackish
- surface waters supply depends on 5 major rivers which enter Hai He River system - upstream withdrawals + contamination of rivers had negative effects on downstream cities
- Beijing also makes things worse through pollution and abstraction
- aqueduct been created to divert water from Three Gorges Dam to Beijing/Tianjin region to improve water quality and conserve water
4
Q
Demand for water
A
- demand for region around 4.9 billion m3 per year + continues to rise
- agriculture account 65% - though is levelling due to water-saving tech
- Industrial output in region increased sixfold in the last 2 years - industries have now become more water-efficient and recycle their waste water + shift from heavy industry to high-tech industry
- fastest rate of increase is domestic use = consumption increased + average demand of 240 litres per person each day