Science Man and His Environment/Water Quantity

Properties
Water has some very unique properties
 * Water expands as it freezes
 * Water is a liquid over a wide temperature range
 * High specific heat
 * Universal solvent
 * High surface tension

Water Distribution




Groundwater pumping


Pumping over water too fast from an unconfined aquifer draws down the water table. Hazards include:
 * Wells going dry
 * Subsidence
 * Salt water intrusion
 * Contamination

Pumping too much water from confined aquifers can lead to aquifer depletion and subsidence.

Water scarcity
Types:
 * Blue water - Water in lakes, rivers, and aquifers
 * Blue water is used directly
 * Green water - Water in the soil
 * Green water is important for crop production
 * Real scarcity - due to lack of rainfall or too many people sharing the same resource
 * Apparent scarcity - sufficient water but the water gets wasted due to inefficiency and losses

We then have four groups of scarcity: real blue water, apparent blue water, real green water, and apparent green water.

Solutions - different types require different solutions. For example: Apparent blue water scarcity can be reduced by reducing system leaks and reducing wasteful water usage Apparent green water scarcity can be reduced by soil conservation measures

Flooding
The opposite problem is too much water creating floods.

Floods are natural phenomena and beneficial. They leave silt for farmland and recharge groundwater. Ancient Egyptian civilization would not have existed if it was not for annual floods of the Nile River.

The following effects of human actions lead to increased flooding:
 * Drainage of wetlands, reducing natural storage
 * Channelization of rivers, changing the streamflow
 * Building on floodplains - the area in which a river naturally floods
 * Urbanization, concrete and asphalt prevents infiltration and increases runoff
 * Deforestation and removal of vegetation, has the same effect on infiltration and runoff

Public vs. private water supply
There is a debate whether water supply should be owned by private companies or public governments

One side claims that private companies are more efficient.

The other side says that water supply is a basic service which should not be driven by profit

Transboundary water issues - whose water?
Problems occur when upstream countries withdraw too much water or release large amounts of water. Problems can be seen, for example, in the Nile, Ganges, and Mekong Rivers.