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Ground Water Resources

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Ground Water Resources Freshwater on/below Earth s surface = 3% Saltwater = 97% – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ground Water Resources


1
Ground Water Resources
  • Freshwater on/below Earths surface 3
  • Saltwater 97

2
Groundwater
  • Precipitation infiltrates and percolates downward
    through soil pore spaces and rock crevices and is
    stored below ground.
  • Groundwater surplus higher than normal water
    table.
  • Groundwater deficit lower than normal water
    table.

3
Water Budget
Water Surplus Inputgtoutput
Average WT
Water Deficit Inputltoutput
4
Aquifers
  • Aquifer porous soils allow for water to
    accumulated in layers of sand and gravel confined
    by clay layers (confining layers)

5
Long Island Sole Source Aquifer
6
Groundwater Recharge Areas
  • Recharge Areas any area of land where water
    passes downward or laterally into an aquifer.
    Example Long Island Pine Barrens or Development
    Recharge Basins sumps.

7
Long Islands Groundwater Recharge
8
Freshwater Uses
  • Irrigation 16
  • Energy Production Cooling 25
  • Domestic/Municipal use 10
  • (mostly developed nations)
  • Agriculture and Industrial Processing 50
  • Eastern USA plenty of water
  • Western USA arid region water shortages
  • Long Island Sole Source Aquifer

9
Causes of Water Shortages
  • Dry Climate
  • Drought Precipitation (low), Evapotranspiration
    and evaporation (high)
  • Dessication (drying out)
  • Water stress as population increases (Las Vegas)
  • Precipitation 10cm/yr 64 water usage by
    homeowners for lawns and gardens!
  • Result water diversion from Colorado River to
    meet water consumption needs.

10
Water Rights in the USA
West First Come-First Serve basis -legal
rights to usage groundwater belongs to the owner
of the land above it! They can use as much as
they want, divert it or sell it to make a
profit! Garrett Hardins Tragedy of the
Commons (FBL)
  • East
  • Riparian Rights
  • -As per needed basis as long as there is enough
    water left for downstream areas.

11
Ogallala Aquifer
Wyoming S. Dakota Nebraska Colorado Kansas New
Mexico Oklahoma Texas
12
Ogallala Aquifer
  • Worlds largest aquifer
  • Water is 15,000 30,000 years old (nonrenewable)
  • VERY SLOW recharge rate
  • Used for irrigation (20) and farming (40)

13
Ogallala Aquifer Problems
  • Water is diverted into arid lands which are
    normally NOT arable.
  • Subsidies provided to farmers to divert water in
    an effort to decrease government crop disaster
    payments to farmers who lose their crop due to
    drought.
  • The government encourages groundwater mining by
    giving tax breaks FBL
  • 3. Water experts expect the Ogallala to be
    economically depleted by 2020 at current
    consumption rate.
  • 4. Native Americans lost rights to water on what
    was originally their land due to settlers
    Appropriation Rights!

14
Colorado River
15
Colorado River Diversion
  • 1,400 miles long
  • Headwaters glacial in Colorado Rocky Mountains
  • Mouth Gulf of California, Mexico
  • Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) and
    US Army Corps of Engineers (ACE) licensed 17
    major hydropower dams and 100 minor dams.
  • Water is diverted to farmers to grow water
    thirsty crops such as alfalfa and ranchers (80)
    as far away as Californias Imperial Valley and
    to cities including Las Vegas.

16
Hydropower Dams Along the Colorado River
17
Subsidies
  • Water is subsidized by taxpayers for construction
    of dams.
  • This presents a false, low cost of water to
    consumers in this extremely arid region.
  • Native Americans have lost rights because of
    settlers Appropriation Rights.
  • Water allotments in USA have been exceeded,
    leaving a trickle of water for Mexicans.
  • Water quality is compromised and biodiversity
    decreases.

18
Gulf of California, Mexico
19
Should Water Be Privatized?
  • Pros to privitization of water when a resource
    is an investment better care is taken of the
    resource.
  • Cons to privitization of water water is a
    common resource for all people to use. Is it
    fair to allow corporations to control common
    resources?
  • Tragedy of the commons overuse and depletion of
    common resources.
  • Mind-set is If I dont use it, someone else
    will
  • (Video)

20
Water Wars in the Middle East
Turkey
Jordan River Jordan Syria Israel Tigris-Euphrate
s Turkey Syria Iraq
Nile River Ethiopia Sudan Egypt
Syria
Iraq
Jordan
Jordan River
Israel
21
Jordan River
  • Israel irrigates 2/3 of its croplands, but uses
    water more efficiently than any other country in
    the world.
  • Jordan 75 of water from Jordan River basin.
    With population on the rise, water shortages
    could cause Jordan to declare war on Israel for
    water useage.
  • Syria gets water from Jordan and the
    Euphrates-Tigris rivers. Syria is closest to
    headwaters for Jordan River. They plan to build
    many dams for water diversion. This will limit
    water going to Jordan and Israel.
  • Israel threatens to destroy dams in Syria.

22
Tigris-Euphrates River
  • Turkey is situated at the headwater and they
    plan to build 22 dams along the upper Tigris and
    Euphrates for hydroelectric plants and for
    irrigation.
  • Turkey plans on diverting water from dams via
    pipelines to Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and possibly
    Syria, Israel and Jordan.
  • Syria gets 90 of its water from the Euphrates.
  • Iraq will be left with very little water.

23
Nile River
  • Ethiopia control 85 of the headwaters.
  • Sudan uses approximately 10 .
  • Egypt the last to get water along the Nile
    (5). Egypt has a thin area of irrigated
    cropland, the rest of Egypt is desert.
  • PROBLEM Egyptian population grows by 1 million
    every 9 months!

24
What Can Egypt Do?
  • Declare war on Sudan and Ethiopia
  • Decrease population growth
  • Save water by improving irrigation efficiency and
    drought resistant crops
  • Spend 2 billion dollars and pump water from Lake
    Nasser (reservoir at the Aswan High Dam)
  • Import more grain to feed population
  • Work out water-sharing agreements with other
    countries.
  • Suffer human and economic losses.

25
How Can Water Problems Be Resolved?
  • 1. Decrease population!
  • 1.2 billion lack access to clean drinking water
  • 2.2 billion live without Sewage Treatment Plants
    (STPs)
  • 2/3 of the world households do NOT have running
    water.
  • Must be a global commitment to sharing this rare
    and valuable resource sustainably!
  • Build dams to store water in (reservoirs)
  • Transfer water from other places.
  • Build desalination plants (USA engineers)
  • Improve efficiency in water usage
  • Conserve water.

26
Why Is Water Wasted In the USA?
  • Artificially low prices of water resulting from
    government subsidies (externalities not including
    in your water bill).
  • Promotion of growing water thirsty crops such as
    alfalfa in California and Arizona! The
    government makes water SO cheap and easily
    accessible through water transfer from Colorado
    River that farmers grow these crops.
  • The US Bureau of Reclamation supplies ΒΌ of all
    water used to irrigate lands to the western USA
    under Long-Term Contracts at greatly subsidized
    prices from our taxes!
  • Watershed Management is divided between state and
    local governments in the western USA, there is
    not 1 Authority in control. Long Island has a
    Regional Water Authority (Suffolk County Water
    Authority) and we are in much better shape, but
    water is still ridiculously cheap.

27
Suffolk County Water Authority
  • Annual Reports on the Quality of Your Drinking
    Water are mailed out each spring to each resident
    in Suffolk County.
  • You can view them online as well.
  • www.scwa.com/residential/yourdrinkingwater.cfm

28
How Can We Conserve Water in the USA?
  • Efficiency improvement
  • Flood irrigation through gravity flow
  • Center-pivot sprinklers (low to ground less
    evaporation. (costs are high initially farmers
    dont use them)
  • Drip Systems release trickle of water near
    plant roots. High initial costs.
  • Computer controlled systems monitor soil
    moisture and turn on irrigation systems as needed
    (high initial costs)
  • Switch to xerophytic crops (little water needed)
    xeroscaping.
  • Consumer should pay true cost of water (include
    externalities)
  • Provide subsidies for conservation methods that
    have high initial start-up costs!
  • Treat wastewater to irrigate non-edible crops.

29
What You Can Do
  • Turn faucet off when brushing teeth (saves 9
    gallons of water)
  • Fill up sink when shaving (saves 14 gallons of
    water)
  • Fill kitchen sink with water to wash pots and
    pans (saves 25 gallons of water)
  • When washing car, do not leave hose running
    (saves 150 gallons of water)
  • Self service car wash uses only 10 gallons of
    water
  • Sponge and bucket uses only 15 gallon of water.
  • Flushing a toilet uses 5-7 gallons of water put
    a displacement device in tank and reduce it to
    2-3 gallons of water per flush.

30
What Can You Do?
  • Install low flow shower head. Decreases water
    use by 35 gallons for every 5 minutes you are in
    the shower.
  • Reduce the time spent in the shower!
  • Install low flow aerator faucet heads (4.00 at
    Home Depot or Hardware Store). Reduces water use
    by 50.
  • Use Phosphate-free detergents (Mandatory in
    Nassau and Suffolk) to decrease cultural
    eutrophication.
  • To Prevent Groundwater Contamination DO NOT
    dispose of paint, paint thinner, oil, grease or
    any other material labeled as hazardous or toxic
    into the environment or down the drain.
  • Town of Islip has special pick ups through WRAP
    program (1 in fall, 1 in spring) OR you can bring
    these materials to the Islip Town recycling
    centers.

31
Groundwater Contamination
  • Groundwater is the primary source of drinking
    water and irrigation.
  • Contamination Sources
  • a. Livestock waste
  • b. Underground storage tanks (leak fuel and
    MTBs)
  • c. Landfills (leach materials breaking down
    (metals, hdyrocarbons, etc.)
  • d. Abandoned hazardous waste sites leach heavy
    metals and solvents into groundwater.

32
Sanitary Landfill
33
Groundwater Protection in USA
  • Clean up is VERY expensive and technically not
    feasible.
  • PREVENTION IS BEST!
  • US Safe Drinking Water Act, 1974 EPA
    established national drinking water standards e.
    0 coliform bacteria colonies per 100mL of water.
  • (Recall Clean Water Act does not protect
    groundwater)

34
EPA MANDATES
  • 1992 survey showed that 40 of the US drinking
    water contained parasitic organisms of
    Cryptosporidium sp., but not Giardia sp.
  • 1996 EPA mandated that ALL Public Water
    Suppliers (Suffolk County Water Authority) test
    for Cryptosporidium sp., but not Giardia sp.
  • There are 255 chemicals and compounds that the
    government requires we monitor in our drinking
    water

Cryptosporidium sp.
Giardia sp.
35
Who Has Too Much Water?
  • When there is too much water or soils are
    persistently saturated, rain events can cause
    disastrous flooding.
  • Humans have contributing to increased flooding
    from
  • a. deforestation
  • b. Mining
  • c. Overgrazing
  • d. urbanization (hard surface increase leads to
    infiltration decrease)

36
Bangladesh
37
Bangladesh
  • 123 million people in one of the poorest
    countries in the world and 80 of the population
    live along the shoreline where there are rich,
    fertile soils.
  • Average per capita GNP 260.00 71 cents/day!
  • Monsoon season brings continuous flooding during
    the summer months. It appears to be cyclic and
    that every four years there are significant
    monsoonal events since the 1970s (historically
    it was about every 50 years!)

38
Why Does Bangladesh Flood So Frequently?
  • Rapid population increase has changed the natural
    character of the land by
  • Deforestation which has promoted significant soil
    erosion.
  • Overgrazing
  • Unsuitable farming (steep slopes) and unsound
    farming practices on these slopes.
  • Cleared coastal mangrove forests to provide land
    to grow rice. They have removed the wetland
    structures and decreased or removed the functions
    they need to survive along the coastlines.
  • No money to restore mangrove swamps!
  • RESULT Millions of homes are destroyed each
    year, thousands of people drown. 30 million
    people become environmental refugees each year.

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40
How Do We Reduce Flood Risks?
  • Channelization to divert water away from
    communities can have both positive and negative
    effects. (Florida Everglades are destroyed from
    ACE water diversion)
  • Build levees and dams when they break
    disaster (Hurricane Katrina)
  • Restore wetland systems (never achieve 100
    replacement of structure and functions)
  • Establish Flood Plain Management Plans How
    about dont build in the flood plain?!!
  • PREVENTION IS BEST!

41
FEMA
  • Federal Emergency Management Agency
  • Provide Flood Plain Maps for every County in the
    USA. Designed for Insurance Companies.
  • Delineate 500 year storm flood elevation
  • Delineate 100 year storm flood elevation
  • Delineates entire flood plain area.

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