Water resources (original) (raw)
Water resources are sources of water that are useful to human beings for drinking, recreation, farming, industry, etc. Even though 70% of the Earth's surface is covered with water, a majority of it is salt water. The supply of fresh water is so limited in many parts of the world that the shortage constitutes a serious problem for the human inhabitants. It has been predicted that global scarcity of water resources will occur many decades before the much-heralded depletion of fossil fuel resources. Water scarcity is but one side of the problem; water quality is the other, in as much as a resource can also be lost through its degradation.
The problem
Human populations in some areas (e.g. southern California, Israel, and Florida) are growing a 1 to 3% per year, while fresh water supplies are remaining constant or shrinking.
Most new available water supplies are contaminated with industrial waste, sewage or salt. Aquifers are already being rapidly used, so even ground water is no longer a practical solution.
Most purification plants use large amounts of oil or other fuel. Nuclear purification plants are politically unpopular. Solar purification plants require too much land and are very expensive.
The result
An increasing number of wars and civil disputes are occurring over water rights.
In the U.S.'s western region, this is not news. Water wars in the U.S. date from the western expansion of the 1820s, even though most of them were fought by private landowners. The historic cowboy range wars were over water rights. Land-theft and rustling were usually attempts to get compensation for or access to water. (They weren't kidding when they said 'There isn't room for both of us...')
Civil disputes in the U.S. also have a long history, especially in California, after the population expansion of the 1850s. Both San Francisco, California and Los Angeles, California engaged in lengthy negotiations, property acquisition, and litigation to secure water rights. San Francisco flooded a beautiful glacial valley, Tehatchapi, over the bitter protests of conservationists led by the Sierra Club. Los Angeles purchased Mono Lake, and drained it to dust, also over bitter protests.
In the Middle East, many of the wars, notably the Six-Day War, have been disputes over water. These are expected to escalate as industry and population increase in the region.
Solutions
Conservation
One part of the solution is conservation. People will pay almost any amount for drinking water. However, far less water can sometimes be used for irrigation, wash water and industrial water.
World-wide, crops irrigated by ditches use 70% or more of available water. Changing to dry-land crops and sprinkler or drip irrigation can reduce agricultural water use by 60 to 90%.
About 15% of water use is industrial. Much industrial water is used for cleaning or cooling. Often the water can be settled, filtered and recycled. This reduces pollution of surface water while reducing use. In some cases, it is profitable for water providing authorities to share the costs of pollution control equipment for industries.
Many authorities say that the way to stop these abuses is simply to charge users the true costs of the water they use. Almost all areas subsidize farm and industrial uses of water by over-charging residential uses.
In cities, the largest waste of water is as run off during rainy seasons. Most roofs and storm sewers could preserve the water for use. In heavily urban southern California, some runoff is diverted to swamps in river deltas, to recharge aquifers and keep ocean water out of city wells.
Some areas of California and Israel use greywater systems, in which household wash water is recycled for irrigation and sewage processing.
A number of cities and water districts in California recycle sewage to standards that would make it usable for drinking or washing water. This "reclaimed water" is used for irrigation, recharging aquifers, or discharge into lakes.
Development
Desalination has long been used on ships, submarines and islands, where there is no alternative. It has also been used to supply water to the US military base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. History of water supply at Guantanamo Bay: [1].
Desalination of brackish water is already commonplace in the U.S., where it is used to meet treaty obligations for river water entering Mexico.
Desalination of ocean water is common in the Middle East, where a number of countries use oil-fired stills to provide city drinking water.
The price of desalination is rapidly declining. A modern, large, efficient plant is within 20% of the cost of developing a new, local source of fresh water. Desalination stills now control pressure, temperature and brine concentrations to optimize the water extraction expense. Other methods of desalination include reverse osmosis and pressure barrier osmosis. Nuclear-powered desalination could be very economical on a large scale.
Importing water
Water has such a low value per pound that it is not usually profitable to import it.
The most effective way to "import" water is in the form of virtual water; that is, to import products that require large amounts of water to produce. A simple example is grain. It usually takes 1000 pounds of water to grow one pound of grain. Thus, each ton of imported grain saves 1000 tons of domestic water. This method is used by Israel, which imports most grain.
Importing Water to the US from Canada
The situation between Canada and the US illustrates some of the complexities of importing water.
Canada has 20% of the world's fresh water and the US has a great need for additional fresh water supplies. The two nations share bodies of water like the Great Lakes so water could be easily transferred from Canada to the US. Although the US would seem to be a natural market for its water, Canada refuses to export any fresh water to the US, except as bottled water.
Under the terms of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), for any commodity that is normally traded between Canada, Mexico and the US, all the nations must be treated the same as the nation that produces the commodity. If Canada were to start bulk water exports to the US, it would lose control of the exports and would be unable to limit American purchases of additional supplies. In effect, Canadians would end up having to compete with the wealthier Americans for access to their own fresh water supply. The only way to avoid this is to stop any attempt to export fresh water in bulk. Even tanker trucks of fresh water are not allowed to cross the Canadian border.
Although Canada has 20% of the world's fresh water, it only receives 7% of the precipitation. Most of Canada consists of rock (the Canadian Shield) or permafrost. Water cannot sink into these impermeable materials but sits on top. The water collects in every hollow to form Canada's innumerable lakes and rivers. Canada's northern latitude means that little water is lost to evaporation before each reaches the sea and this accounts for Canada's vast supply of fresh water. Canadians are afraid that, if allowed, Americans would �mine� Canada's fresh water by taking more than is replaced each year.
The waters shared by the two nations are controlled by the International Boundary Waters Treaty (1909). This treaty prevents the US from, say, just pumping all the water that it wants out of the Great Lakes.
Some vast schemes have been proposed for transferring water about the continent. The Great Recycling and Northern Development (GRAND) Canal scheme proposed damming off James Bay (the southern appendix of Hudson Bay), letting it fill with fresh water and then pumping the water south to the Great Lakes where it could be distributed to the US. The North American Water and Power Alliance (NAWAPA) proposed damming and flooding the Rocky Mountain Trench and then using a vast system of canals to distribute the water across the continent � all the way to northern Mexico and the Great Lakes. One by-product would be a navigable canal connecting the Pacific Ocean with the Great Lakes.