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WATER RESOURCES AND WATER POLLUTION

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Title: WATER RESOURCES AND WATER POLLUTION


1
CHAPTER 12
  • WATER RESOURCES AND WATER POLLUTION

2
Water wars in the Middle East
  • These are not the only water waters!
  • Phoenix and Tuscon, Arizona
  • Georgia and Alabama
  • Resolving the problems will require
  • regional cooperation to allocate water supplies
  • slowed population growth
  • efficiency in using water
  • increased water prices to encourage conservation
    and improve irrigation efficiency

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4
Waters Unique properties
  • Strong forces of attraction (hydrogen bonds)
    between molecules of water --gt
  • liquid water stores much heat and changes
    temperature very slowly
  • lots of heat is required to evaporate water
  • so.water exists as a liquid over wide range of
    temperature
  • and it has high surface tension

5
Waters Unique Properties -2
  • Also because of unique molecular attractions
  • water expands as it freezes, becomes less dense,
    and floats
  • water can dissolve a variety of compounds
  • it can dissolve and carry nutrients and wastes
    around in living systems
  • it can remove and dilute water soluble wastes of
    civilization

6
Supply, renewal and use of water resources
  • 97 is salt water - cannot be used to drink,
    irrigate or for industry
  • Most of the 3 of fresh water is frozen in ice
    caps.
  • 0.592 is available fresh water - constantly
    recycled in hydrologic cycle
  • Water availability is far from uniform - due to
    variations in precipitation areas needing the
    most often have the least.

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Fresh water sources
  • Precipitation - surface water flows into streams,
    etc.
  • A watershed is a drainage basin - collects water
    which ultimately will go to a specific place
  • Precipitation - may infiltrate ground filling
    voids existing there - called ground water
  • zone of saturation - upper boundary is water table

9
Fresh Water Sources
  • Aquifers are porous, water filled areas - can be
    confined or unconfined
  • Recharge areas- where water enters aquifers
  • Discharge points- water leaves aquifers
  • Water mining (digging wells) withdraws water from
    aquifers - can be depleted
  • Aquifers are nonrenewable -on human scale

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How do we use worlds fresh water
  • We use 54 of global surface runoff
  • Global withdrawal rate is growing exponentially -
    but varies worldwide
  • 70 used for irrigation - up to 80 evaporates
  • 20 used for industry - see amounts on p. 290
  • 10 used by residences and cities
  • Differences in water supply and varying uses in
    U.S. regions east versus. west

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13
Too Little Water
  • Causes of water scarcity
  • dry climate
  • drought
  • desiccation of soil
  • water stress - low per capita water availability
  • 40 population lives in water-short areas
  • compare current with projections for 2025
  • Wasteful and unsustainable use of normally
    available supplies is the problem

14
Too little water - 2
  • Conflicts over water supplies are growing
  • Water tables are falling on every continent much
    river water never reaches the sea
  • Access to water is a key foreign policy and will
    become increasingly important
  • Where water is abundant, it is often not where it
    is needed.

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16
Increasing water supplies
  • Ways to increase supplies
  • Build dams and reservoirs to store runoff
  • Bring in surface water from another area
  • Withdraw groundwater
  • Desalinate salt water - make fresh water
  • Improve efficiency of water use
  • Developed countries transport water to where
    needed
  • Developing countries - settle where water is

17
Dam Reservoirs -Pros Cons
  • Water can be used for hydroelectric power,
    irrigation, control of flooding, carried to
    people by aqueducts and recreation
  • Bad effects include death of river organisms,
    destruction of estuaries, salt water
    contamination of aquifers near coast
  • What are pros and cons of proposed Three Gorges
    project to dam the Yangtze river?

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19
Watershed transfers - Pros Cons
  • Transfer by tunnels, aquaducts under ground
    pipes from water rich to water poor
  • always an effect - You cant do just one thing
  • California water project carries water from north
    to southern California
  • Opponents say too much transported water is
    wasted and negatively affects N. California
  • Groundwater already being withdrawn too fast

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21
Watershed transfers - 2
  • James Bay Watershed Transfer Project
  • Proposed construction of 600 dams and dikes
    affecting 19 giant rivers - huge watershed
  • Project will flood boreal forest and tundra and
    displace indigenous Indians
  • Phase I completed Phases II and III postponed
    due to Indian opposition, contract cancellation,
    and no need for more electricity

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Watershed transfers -3
  • Soviet Union - water transfer by worlds longest
    irrigation canal has shrunk Aral Sea
  • seas salinity has tripled
  • 54 less surface area 80 volume reduction
  • supply rivers are trickles
  • extinction of native fish, bird and other species
  • destruction of forests cropland
  • sea is no longer a thermal buffer
  • water table contaminated

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Groundwater withdrawal - pros cons
  • Advantages over surface water use
  • can be removed year round
  • not lost by evaporation
  • development cheaper than surface water system
  • Overuse of groundwater has led to
  • aquifer depletion
  • aquifer subsidence
  • intrusion of salt water into aquifers

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Groundwater withdrawal - pros cons
  • Withdrawal in U.S. is 4x replacement rate
  • Ogallala Aquifer
  • Arid S.W. U.S
  • Most other countries have water crises
  • Coastal rapid withdrawal --gt salt intrusion
  • To prevent groundwater depletion cut population
    growth, wise planting, use strains using less
    water, efficient irrigation

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30
Usefulness of desalination
  • Removal of dissolved salt from water by
  • distillation - evaporation then condensation
  • reverse osmosis - pumping through salt excluding
    membrane
  • 11,100 plants are very expensive to operate
  • What to do with salt removed - put it in ocean?
    Or on land?
  • Solar powered distillation plants?

31
Cloud seeding and icebergs
  • Silver iodide particles form condensation nuclei
    difficult in very dry areas
  • cloud rustling
  • Tow icebergs to water deficient areas - pump
    melted ice to cities

32
Reduce water waste
  • 65 - 70 of water used is wasted
  • waste could be reduced to 15
  • Benefits of water conservation
  • reduce burden on wastewater plants and septic
    systems
  • decrease surface and ground water pollution
  • reduce of dams and water transfer systems
  • slow depletion of groundwater aquifers
  • save and energy to treat distribute water

33
Why do we waste so much water?
  • Government subsidies produce artificially low
    water prices
  • Taxes born by all pay for subsidies
  • Little incentive to use less water
  • Need regional approach to water management.

34
Irrigation Losses
  • Only 40 of water diverted for irrigation reaches
    crops
  • Flood irrigation delivers too much water
  • Irrigation canals can be lined /or covered
  • Low-energy precision application sprinklers
  • Trickle or drip irrigation systems minimize
    evaporation
  • Computer systems monitor soil moisture

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Water waste in industry, homes and businesses
  • 78 household water - toilets and bathing
  • Xeriscaping uses dry-adapted plants
  • Leaky pipes waste 50 of water
  • Lack of water metering provide no incentive to
    save household water
  • Water saving devices help
  • Educate the public on ways to save water

37
Water waste in industry, homes and businesses - 2
  • S.W. droughts --gt water demand reduction with
    economic hardship
  • Use of gray water need to separate water flows
    from homes from flows from industry
  • Automated recycling systems
  • Collect and use rainwater for nondrinking
  • Coordinate water policies of national and local
    governments

38
Too Much Water
  • Causes of flooding
  • water overflows natural channel to floodplain
  • floodplains, including wetlands
  • provide natural flood and erosion control
  • help maintain how water quality
  • contribute to groundwater recharging
  • people living in floodplains face consequences

39
Too Much Water - 2
  • Flooding kills damages but benefits are
  • provide productive farmland
  • recharge groundwater under plains
  • refill wetlands
  • Human effect on flooding
  • removal of water-absorbing vegetation
  • living on flood plains
  • urbanization - highways, parking lots, buildings

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41
Living dangerously in Bangladesh
  • Most densely populated
  • 80 of country is floodplain great floods occur
    every 4 years now due to
  • population growth, deforestation, farming
  • clearing protective coasting mangrove forests
  • devastating cyclones
  • Bangladesh, Bhutan, China, India, and Nepal need
    to cooperate in reforestation and flood control
    measures reduce population

42
Reduction of flood risks
  • Channelization - straighten and deepen stream -
    controversial due to erosion effects
  • Artificial levees and embankments - often cause
    damage downstream --gt levee races
  • Flood control dams can overflow or fill with
    sediment
  • Measures provide false sense of security

43
Reduction of flood risks - 2
  • Floodplain management
  • construct flood frequency curve - historical
    records and vegetation examination
  • use data to develop plan
  • prohibit buildings or activities in high risk
    zones
  • elevate or flood proof allowed structures
  • construct floodway
  • Federal flood Disaster Protection Act -1973
  • requires floodplain development regulations
  • federal flood insurance

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46
Major Water Pollutants
  • Disease-causing agents (pathogens)
  • bacteria
  • viruses
  • protozoa
  • parasitic worms
  • water quality indicator - coliform bacteria
  • Oxygen-demanding wastes - Biological Oxygen
    Demand - oxygen needed by aerobic decomposers

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48
Major Water Pollutants - 2
  • Water-soluble inorganic chemicals - acids, salts,
    toxic metals
  • make water unfit to drink, harm fish and other
    aquatic life, lower crop yields, accelerate
    corrosion of metals exposed to water
  • Inorganic nutrients - nitrates phosphates
  • cause excessive algae and water plant growth
    which then die, decompose and use up oxygen

49
Major Water Pollutants - 3
  • Organic chemicals - oil, gasoline, plastics,
    pesticides, cleaning solvents, detergents
  • Sediment -insoluble particles suspended in water
  • reduces photosynthesis disrupts food webs,
    carries harmful substance, destroys feeding
    spawning grounds, clogs and fills lakes
  • Water-soluble radioactive isotopes
  • Heated water - thermal pollution
  • Introduction of non-native species

50
Water Pollution Sources
  • Point sources are at specific places and are
    relatively easy to identify, monitor and
    regulate
  • factories
  • sewage treatment plants
  • active and abandoned underground mines
  • offshore oil wells
  • tankers

51
Water Pollution Sources - 2
  • Nonpoint sources cannot be traced to single
    source of discharge
  • acid deposition
  • runoff of chemicals into surface water
  • seepage into the ground from croplands
  • Nonpoint sources 57 - 64 of total mass of
    pollutants entering waters

52
Stream Pollution Problems
  • Streams can recover relatively quickly from
    degradable, oxygen-demanding wastes and excess
    heat - natural recovery depends on
  • dilution and bacterial decay as long as there is
  • no overloading of pollutants
  • maintenance of flow
  • Decomposition of biodegradable waste requires
    oxygen --gt oxygen-sag curve

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54
Stream pollution reduction progress
  • What if cities removed drinking water down stream
    rather than up-stream?
  • Good News Water pollution control laws have
    improved wastewater treatment plants and
    decreased discharges from industry
  • Cuyahoga River (Ohio) burned today is good
  • River cleanup is occurring in Canada, Japan and
    Europe

55
Stream pollution reduction progress
  • Bad news - disasterous fish kills and drinking
    water contamination continues
  • industrial release of toxic inorganic and organic
    chemicals
  • malfunctioning sewage treatment plants
  • nonpoint runoff of pesticides and nutrients
  • Developing nations and eastern Europe have little
    wastewater treatment sewage and industrial waste
    in waters

56
Lake pollution problems
  • Dilution less useful - little flushing
  • Stratification of layers reduces oxygen
  • More vulnerable to sediment atmospheric fallout
  • Many pollutants are biologically magnified
  • Eutrophication - natural nutrient enrichment of
    lakes is intensified near cities - cultural
    eutrophication

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Lake pollution problems - 2
  • Cultural eutrophication prevention
  • advanced waste treatment
  • phosphate limits or bans
  • soil conservation land use control
  • Clean-up
  • dredge bottom sediments remove weeds
  • control undesirable plant growth
  • pump in air

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Great Lakes pollution - good news
  • Great Lakes pollution control program-1972
    brought about improvements by
  • treatment of sewage and industrial waste
  • banning phosphate detergents, cleaners, etc
  • Resulted in
  • decreased phosphate, coliforms, toxic chemical
  • decreased algae blooms
  • increased dissolved oxygen
  • most swimming beaches reopened

61
Great Lakes pollution - bad news
  • lt 3 of shoreline is safe
  • nonpoint land runoff exceeds industrial wastes
  • grasshopper effect - pollution arrived from
    elsewhere and then carried elsewhere
  • many fish should not be eaten
  • low water levels - will get lower
  • Should more bans be made?

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63
Genetic pollution in Great Lakes
  • Zebra mussels from Europe --gt effects
  • decrease food for other species
  • clogging irrigation pipes
  • shut down water intakes
  • foul beaches grow on docks
  • 700 million per year cost
  • store and pass on pollutants (biomagnification)
  • will spread to other waters
  • round goby feed on mussels but also on other
    species

64
Groundwater pollution problems
  • Aquifers easy to deplete slow to replenish
  • Contaminated groundwater slow to clean
  • slow movement and decomposition
  • Sources of groundwater contamination
  • underground storage tanks
  • landfills
  • abandoned hazardous waste dumps
  • liquid hazardous disposal in deep wells
  • livestock waste storage lagoons near aquifers

65
How to protect groundwater?
  • Groundwater clean up is too expensive, so..
  • We must prevent contamination by
  • monitoring aquifers near landfills and tanks
  • requiring leak detection systems
  • require underground tank liability insurance
  • ban or strictly regulate hazardous waste disposal
  • in deep injection wells or in landfills
  • require above ground storage with leak detectors

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Ocean Pollution
  • Oceans can dilute, disperse and degrade large
    amounts of raw sewage, sewage sludge, oil and
    some industrial waste in deep-water areas
  • But some marine life is less resilient to
    pollution
  • Effect of pollutants on coastal areas
  • 40 of population lives near coast
  • wetlands, estuaries, coral reefs and mangrove
    swamps
  • many diseases from pollution affect coastal
    residents
  • eutrophication has led to vast dead zones

68
Chesapeake Bay
  • Largest U.S. estuary - a pollution sink
  • receives drainage from 9 large rivers and 141
    smaller streams
  • shallow and poorly flushed by ocean
  • point and nonpoint sources and air pollutants
  • Chesapeake Bay Program (1980s) has reduced
    pollutants but zebra mussels will soon invade

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Pollutants dumped into oceans
  • U.S. coastline industrial waste dumping stopped
    (still occurs in other countries)
  • Barges and ships continue to dump dredge spoils
  • Sewage sludge banned in U.S. (continues in other
    countries)
  • Agreements not to dump difficult to enforce
  • London Dumping Convention, 1972

71
Oil effects on ocean ecosystems
  • Sources of release
  • tanker accidents and offshore drilling blowouts
    important, but more from normal operations
  • waste oil is dumped, spilled and leaked
  • Effects depend on
  • amount and type of oil (crude or refined)
  • distance from shore of release
  • time of year, weather, water temperature and
    currents

72
Exxon Valdez Oil Spill
  • 1989 - oil pumped from Alaskas North slope
    fields to port of Valdez to tankers
  • Worst oil spill in U.S waters
  • Lack of double hull on Exxon Valdez
  • 8.5 billion accident Exxon spent 2.2 billion
  • Disaster showed importance of pollution
    prevention need for energy efficiency and use of
    renewable energy

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Protection of Coastal Waters
  • Prevention
  • Separate sewage from storm runoff
  • No ocean dumping of sludge and hazards
  • Protect ecologically sensitive areas
  • Use ecological land-use planning
  • Require double hulled oil tankers
  • Recycle used oil
  • Reduce genetic pollution

75
Protection of Coastal Waters - 2
  • Cleanup
  • Improve oil spill cleanup capabilities
  • Require at least secondary treatment of sewage
  • Or use wetlands or environmentally acceptable
    methods for cleanup

76
Preventing and reducing water pollution
  • Water pollution from nonpoint sources
  • reduce fertilizer runoff into surface waters
  • use agricultural methods using less fertilizer
  • vegetation buffer zones
  • use biological control of pests or IPM
  • reduce nonfarm fertilizer use
  • control runoff from feedlots etc
  • reforest critical watersheds

77
Preventing reducing water pollution point
sources - legal approach
  • Water Pollution Control Act of 1972, etc. have
    increased number of fishable swimmable waters
  • EPA developed discharge trading policy
  • Continuing problems meat industry pollutant
    runoffs, industrial wastes, antiquated sewage
    systems
  • Should Clean Water Act be strengthened or
    weakened?

78
Preventing reducing water pollution point
sources - technological approach
  • Regular cleaning of rural suburban septic tanks
  • Urban sewage surface runoff separation
  • Sewage treatment plant purification levels
  • primary - mechanical removal of solids
  • secondary - aerobic bacteria degradation
  • trickling filters or activated sludge process
  • advanced sewage treatment -chemical physical

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What to do with sewage sludge
  • In U.S. 55 is dumped in landfills or
    incinerated 9 composted 36 applied to land
  • Sewage sludge must be treated to kill harmful
    bacteria before use as fertilizer
  • Better to prevent toxic and hazardous wastes from
    reaching sewage treatment plants

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Work with nature to treat sewage
  • Arcata, California uses artificial wetland
  • sedimentation --gtaeration in oxidation ponds--gt
    release into artificial marshes where bacteria
    plants cleanup water marsh is bird sanctuary
  • Phoenix, Arizona - creating wetlands for part of
    its sewage
  • Use of greenhouse lagoons with sunlight and
    natural food chains to clean sewage

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Safe drinking water?
  • 1/4 of people in developing countries do not have
    safe drinking water
  • May lead to increase in cancer and liver deaths
  • Tremendous cost of providing low-cost safe water
    and sanitation
  • Treatment of water for drinking in cities -
    similar to waste water treatment

86
Protection of quality of drinking water
  • U.S. Safe Drinking Water Act of 1974- set
    standards - maximum contaminant levels
  • attempts have been made to weaken standards by
    water polluting industries environmentalists
    want to strengthen standards
  • privately owned wells not required to meet
    standards
  • lack of notification of contaminated drinking
    water

87
Protection of quality of drinking water -2
  • Bottled water is not always safer (International
    Bottled Water Association)
  • Check out safety of tap water before buying
    bottled water or
  • Installation of home water purifiers - look for
    EPA approval

88
Sustainable use of water resources
  • Underlying forces leading to unsustainable use
  • depletion or degradation of a shared resource
  • population growth
  • unequal distribution or access

89
Sustainable use of water resources
  • Sustainable use - use must not exceed recharge
    requires integrated plan for water use, sewage
    treatment, and water pollution of a common basin
  • We must switch to prevention by
  • reduce toxicity and volume
  • reuse wastewater
  • recycle pollutants
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