what is water stress?
if a country’s renewable freshwater supply is between 1000 and 1700mcubed per person per year
what is water insecurity?
when present and future water supplies cannot be guaranteed
what is (physical) water scarcity?
if a country’s renewable freshwater supply falls to below 1000mcubed per person per year
which areas are experiencing water scarcity?
which areas are experiencing water stress?
explain the growing mismatch between water supply and demand
what are the 4 physical causes of water insecurity?
explain salt water encroachment and the Florida case study
what are the 2 human causes of water insecurity?
explain two examples of chains of reasoning for water stress and insecurity
1) increasing pop and economic growth
2) low development levels
increasing pop and economic growth - increased demand for water - overabstraction of groundwater and surface stores - salt water intrusion at the coast - water stress and scarcity
low development levels - lack of investment into making freshwater available and affordable, damage to ecosystems, decline in water availability, water stress and security
what are the 4 main factors for the rising demand of water (explained)
1) population growth
- demand for water is growing twice as fast as pop growth
- increased urbanisation puts a threat on the availability of freshwater with more than half of the world living in urban areas
- by 2030, the urban pop in Asia and africa is set to double
2) rising living standards
- increase in middle class led to sharp increase in water use, swimming pools, washing machines and dishwashers
- changing consumption patterns such as increasing meat consumption and building bigger homes
3) economic development (agriculture and industrialisation)
- the OECD predict that global water demand for manufacturing would increase by 400% from 2000-2050
- where water is not well regulated, pollution could increase dramatically with industrial spillage and poor waste management
AGRICULTURE
- in some cases up to 90% of water used by a country is for agriculture, growing demand for food
- agricultural demands for freshwater are unsustainable through increasing pesticide and fertiliser pollution, depleting aquifers and increased salinity
- 20% of the world’s irrigated land now suffers from salinity
what are the three main pressures increasing the risk of water insecurity?
1) diminishing supply
- climate change and impacts
- deteriorating quality from pollution
- impact of competing users (upstream vs downstream)
2) rising demands
- pop growth
- economic development
3) competing demands from users (within basins)
- international issues
- upstream vs downstream
- HEP vs irrigation
explain the causes and patterns of physical scarcity
explain the causes and patterns of economic scarcity
why does the price of water vary globally
explain the water poverty index
the WPI uses five measures to indicate levels of water insecurity:
1) resources- the physical availability of surface and groundwater and its quality
2) access- the accessibility of safe water for human use, including domestic, industrial and agricultural use
3) capacity- the effectiveness of water management to ensure affordability
4) use- the use of water for different purposes, including domestic, industrial and agricultural use
5) environment- water management strategies to ensure ecological sustainability
each of the measures are scored out of 20 to give an overall score of up to 100
explain the water poverty index for the UK, china and the USA
UK- they have a very good WPI at 71, they score the best in terms of capacity at 17.8 meaning they are very efficient in terms of the water they use
China- they have a medium WPI at 56.6 with their use scoring the highest at 18, this could be down to their growing pop and middle class, they score the best in terms of resources at 7.1
USA- they have a a medium WPI at 58.5, their use is at 1.3 as they waste a lot of water, they are not efficient
explain the importance of water supply for human well-being (two chains of reasoning)
improvements in water, reduction in illnesses from dirty water (65% reduction in deaths from diarrhoea), improved health, access to working life and therefore reduced poverty
improvements in water, lower medical costs and fewer days off work, improved school attendance, improved education and career opportunities, reduced poverty
explain the importance of water supply for economic development (industry, energy supply, agriculture)
agriculture
industry and energy
explain Madagascar’s dirty water
what has the privatisation of water systems resulted in for developing nations?
in the 1980s the world bank and IMF gave loans to developing countries to privatise their water system to reduce costs but many have cancelled these projects as the water becomes unaffordable for a lot of people
explain what is happening in Bolivia to water
explain what is happening in Canada to water
explain what is happening in denmark to water