W - 3.1 -> 3.4 Flashcards

1
Q

Mekong, SE Asia p1

A
  • Name means ‘Mother of Rivers’ in Thai/Lao
  • Transboundary - ties destinies of 6 countries
  • Born from snowmelt on Tibetan Plateau (17,000 ft.) and topped up by monsoon rains
  • 60 million depend on river directly – but also consider indirect needs (produce)
  • Very rich biodiversity (second to Amazon)
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2
Q

Mekong, SE Asia p2

A
  • Fastest growing river basin in HEP construction:
  • China has completed 8 dams, has 5 more under construction and 11 planned
  • Laos & Cambodia – 2 under construction, 9 planned
  • Lower Mekong managed by Mekong River Commission (MRC) – but limited power and cash – China refuses to be a member
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3
Q

rising pressure: p1

A
  • population growth
  • Economic development
  • Rising living standards
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4
Q

Main pressures increasing the risk of water insecurity

A
  • diminishing supply - climate change, quality from pollution
  • Rising demands - population growth, economic development
  • Competing demands within a basin - trans boundary, upstream downstream
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5
Q

Reducing Quality (Water Contamination)
4 main ways: p1

A
  • Intensive agriculture – chemical fertilisers, pesticides
  • Industrial production – wastes and chemicals, mining, untreated sewage, and particularly, heavy metals
  • Urbanisation – runoff and waste water, as well as poor sewerage systems
  • Agribusiness – nitrate, and phosphate fertilisers – leading to eutrophication, hypoxia and dead zones
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6
Q

Reducing Quality (Water Contamination)
4 main ways: p2

A
  • Dams then hold back water – reduced quantity makes it harder to to flush out pollution)
    How big an issue is it globally?
  • 1bn people live without safe water 
  • 2.3bn live without adequate sanitation
  • China: 300m people use contaminated water each day
  • 190m suffer illnesses each year
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7
Q

clear water erosion:

A
  • clear water = less sediment = higher energy = higher velocity = higher erosion
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8
Q

national water carrier

A

delivers fresh water from the Sea of Galilee all around Israel.

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9
Q

due to Israel pumping out fresh water from the sea of galilee

A

for farming and daily use,
Jordan receives mostly saline water and has experienced significant drought as a result.

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10
Q

freshwater demand in Palestinian settlements

A

exceed the supply of freshwater in each area, so Palestinians are forced to resort to saltwater

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11
Q

gaza aquifier is

A

badly overdrawn and polluted – 96% of household water from the aquifier is undrinkable

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12
Q

Saltwater encroachment into aquifers

A

due to over pumping

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13
Q

Israel gets

A

40% of its water from Palestinian Territories

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14
Q

finite supply

A
  • saltwater encroachment and contamination affects water quantity + quality
  • global latitude/ climate
  • climate change and associated triggers
  • ENSO variability - unpredictable drought and floods
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15
Q

growing demand

A
  • pollution from agriculture/ industry
  • rising demand from emerging economies + rising population
  • over extraction of water from river
  • bottom billion cant afford to pay for it
  • poor governance means poor communities cant afford or access water
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16
Q

water stress occurs when

A

supply is less than 1700m3 a person

17
Q

water scarcity occurs when

A

supply is less than 1200m3 a person

18
Q

Israel

A
  • formed in 1948 following UN partition to create Arab and Jewish states
  • has occupied territory in West Bank, Golan heights
19
Q

natural climate

A
  • warm climate, high evaporations, less precipitation
  • water falls in winter, in norther
  • 1.1 bn of ground water
  • irrigation Is necessary
20
Q

salt water incursion

A
  • freshwater hold seawater back
  • removal means intrusion
  • coastal aquifer - water is 20-50m bsl
21
Q

Israels demand for water p1

A
  • 60% desert, 10% population increase since 48
  • agriculture - desert farming specialists
  • industry - huge technological base
  • sanitation - untreated sewage and agricultural runoff into coastal aquifer
22
Q

Israels demand for water p2

A
  • health - zionist desire to make the desert bloom
  • settler communities have brief outages
  • food - drip irrigation helps
23
Q

Rawabi

A
  • The first ever planned city for palestinians – 25-40k ppl people
  • West bank
  • 2010-14
  • Didn’t have access to water until 2015
  • Used as political capital re negotiations over Israeli settlers
  • Overruled by PM Benjamin Netanyanu
  • Limited water available
  • New reservoir to be constructed outside of Rawabi
24
Q

Water for human wellbeing:

A
  • Human health (lack of water is responsible for 10% of disease) - 13/14%/yr increase in patients admitted with kidney problems in Gaza hospitals
  • Israel blockades Gaza – hard to import more than 15% of equipment needed for clean water and toilets
  • Climate is changing – more than 2oc increase since 1950s, 40% decrease in rain
25
Q

Water is a human right/ social dignity:

A
  • Lack of water has a disproportionate impact on poor/ women/ children
  • Economic growth means better health and reduced health costs
26
Q

Conflict?

A

*35 million people depend on limited water supply (32,500 GL per year)
*Introduction of water cap and Murray-Darling basin plan overshadowed by illegal over use (above quota) from farmers
*Conflict with environmentalists over wetland water availability (16 RAMSAR listed wetlands exist in basin)

27
Q

Murray-Darling Basin Plan:

A
  • 2012 by MDBA
  • Legislation to guide governments, regional authorities + local communities to sustainably manage the basin
  • Aim of the plan is to ensure that water is shared between all users– and to return 2,750 GL back to river system
  • System involves buyback scheme (trade) - taxpayers buy water back from farmers -$13 billion spent so far
  • But, extraction rules for irrigators have changed – allowing them to use larger pumps to extract this ‘environmental’ water
  • Key area of dispute is Barwon-Darling River System
28
Q

Brewarrina residents - fishing community

A

Tension between irrigators and fishermen, pumps are so powerful, water flowing other way. Members have split over whether to accept donation from Cotton Bourke. They keep an eye on the local irrigators, suggesting some distrust.

29
Q

Clyde and Webster limited cotton farms

A

Cotton farms, have massive storages of water, 5 of them on one farm holds 32 billion litres of water on just farm. Own more water than anyone else in the country bar the government, Look to make money from cotton, or by selling water in droughts to farmers in demand.

30
Q

environmental defenders office

A

Water purchased with Australian taxpayer money to go to the environment, yet private irrigation firms are storing all the water – is it not a public interest?

31
Q

Causes of water insecurity

A
  • physical causes: climate, evaporation and evapotranspiration, discharge into the sea, saltwater encroachment
  • Contamination of water by agricultural, industrial and domestic pollution, overabstraction from rivers
32
Q

Water for economic development

A
  • agriculture, industry and energy, domestic use - worker Productivity