[Vision2020] Fwd: Earth Policy Release - Water Tables Falling and Rivers Running Dry
Tom Trail
ttrail at moscow.com
Tue Jul 24 07:41:54 PDT 2007
>Visionaires:
I thought the following report would be of interest to you.
Tom Trail
>Earth Policy Institute
>Plan B 2.0 Book Byte
>For Immediate Release
>July 24, 2007
>
>WATER TABLES FALLING AND RIVERS RUNNING DRY
>
>http://www.earthpolicy.org/Books/Seg/PB2ch03_ss2.htm
>
>Lester R. Brown
>
>As the worlds demand for water has tripled over
>the last half-century and as the demand for
>hydroelectric power has grown even faster, dams
>and diversions of river water have drained many
>rivers dry. As water tables fall, the springs
>that feed rivers go dry, reducing river flows.
>
>Scores of countries are overpumping aquifers as
>they struggle to satisfy their growing water
>needs, including each of the big three grain
>producers--China, India, and the United States.
>More than half the worlds people live in
>countries where water tables are falling.
>
>There are two types of aquifers: replenishable
>and nonreplenishable (or fossil) aquifers. Most
>of the aquifers in India and the shallow aquifer
>under the North China Plain are replenishable.
>When these are depleted, the maximum rate of
>pumping is automatically reduced to the rate of
>recharge.
>
>For fossil aquifers, such as the vast U.S.
>Ogallala aquifer, the deep aquifer under the
>North China Plain, or the Saudi aquifer,
>depletion brings pumping to an end. Farmers who
>lose their irrigation water have the option of
>returning to lower-yield dryland farming if
>rainfall permits. In more arid regions, however,
>such as in the southwestern United States or the
>Middle East, the loss of irrigation water means
>the end of agriculture.
>
>The U.S. embassy in Beijing reports that Chinese
>wheat farmers in some areas are now pumping from
>a depth of 300 meters, or nearly 1,000 feet.
>Pumping water from this far down raises pumping
>costs so high that farmers are often forced to
>abandon irrigation and return to less productive
>dryland farming. A World Bank study indicates
>that China is overpumping three river basins in
>the north--the Hai, which flows through Beijing
>and Tianjin; the Yellow; and the Huai, the next
>river south of the Yellow. Since it takes 1,000
>tons of water to produce one ton of grain, the
>shortfall in the Hai basin of nearly 40 billion
>tons of water per year (1 ton equals 1 cubic
>meter) means that when the aquifer is depleted,
>the grain harvest will drop by 40 million
>tons--enough to feed 120 million Chinese.
>
>In India, water shortages are particularly
>serious simply because the margin between actual
>food consumption and survival is so precarious.
>In a survey of Indias water situation, Fred
>Pearce reported in New Scientist that the 21
>million wells drilled are lowering water tables
>in most of the country. In North Gujarat, the
>water table is falling by 6 meters (20 feet) per
>year. In Tamil Nadu, a state with more than 62
>million people in southern India, wells are
>going dry almost everywhere and falling water
>tables have dried up 95 percent of the wells
>owned by small farmers, reducing the irrigated
>area in the state by half over the last decade.
>
>As water tables fall, well drillers are using
>modified oil-drilling technology to reach water,
>going as deep as 1,000 meters in some locations.
>In communities where underground water sources
>have dried up entirely, all agriculture is
>rain-fed and drinking water is trucked in.
>Tushaar Shah, who heads the International Water
>Management Institutes groundwater station in
>Gujarat, says of Indias water situation, When
>the balloon bursts, untold anarchy will be the
>lot of rural India.
>
>In the United States, the U.S. Department of
>Agriculture reports that in parts of Texas,
>Oklahoma, and Kansas--three leading
>grain-producing states--the underground water
>table has dropped by more than 30 meters (100
>feet). As a result, wells have gone dry on
>thousands of farms in the southern Great Plains.
>Although this mining of underground water is
>taking a toll on U.S. grain production,
>irrigated land accounts for only one fifth of
>the U.S. grain harvest, compared with close to
>three fifths of the harvest in India and four
>fifths in China.
>
>Pakistan, a country with 158 million people that
>is growing by 3 million per year, is also mining
>its underground water. In the Pakistani part of
>the fertile Punjab plain, the drop in water
>tables appears to be similar to that in India.
>Observation wells near the twin cities of
>Islamabad and Rawalpindi show a fall in the
>water table between 1982 and 2000 that ranges
>from 1 to nearly 2 meters a year.
>
>In the province of Baluchistan, water tables
>around the capital, Quetta, are falling by 3.5
>meters per year. Richard Garstang, a water
>expert with the World Wildlife Fund and a
>participant in a study of Pakistans water
>situation, said in 2001 that within 15 years
>Quetta will run out of water if the current
>consumption rate continues.
>
>Iran, a country of 70 million people, is
>overpumping its aquifers by an average of 5
>billion tons of water per year, the water
>equivalent of one third of its annual grain
>harvest. Under the small but agriculturally rich
>Chenaran Plain in northeastern Iran, the water
>table was falling by 2.8 meters a year in the
>late 1990s. New wells being drilled both for
>irrigation and to supply the nearby city of
>Mashad are responsible. Villages in eastern Iran
>are being abandoned as wells go dry, generating
>a flow of water refugees.
>
>Saudi Arabia, a country of 25 million people, is
>as water-poor as it is oil-rich. Relying heavily
>on subsidies, it developed an extensive
>irrigated agriculture based largely on its deep
>fossil aquifer. After several years of using oil
>money to support wheat prices at five times the
>world market level, the government was forced to
>face fiscal reality and cut the subsidies. Its
>wheat harvest dropped from a high of 4 million
>tons in 1992 to some 2 million tons in 2005.
>Some Saudi farmers are now pumping water from
>wells that are 1,200 meters deep (nearly four
>fifths of a mile).
>
>In neighboring Yemen, a nation of 21 million,
>the water table under most of the country is
>falling by roughly 2 meters a year as water use
>outstrips the sustainable yield of aquifers. In
>western Yemens Sanaa Basin, the estimated
>annual water extraction of 224 million tons
>exceeds the annual recharge of 42 million tons
>by a factor of five, dropping the water table 6
>meters per year. World Bank projections indicate
>the Sanaa Basin--site of the national capital,
>Sanaa, and home to 2 million people--will be
>pumped dry by 2010.
>
>In the search for water, the Yemeni government
>has drilled test wells in the basin that are 2
>kilometers (1.2 miles) deep--depths normally
>associated with the oil industry--but they have
>failed to find water. Yemen must soon decide
>whether to bring water to Sanaa, possibly by
>pipeline from coastal desalting plants, if it
>can afford it, or to relocate the capital.
>Either alternative will be costly and
>potentially traumatic.
>
>Israel, even though it is a pioneer in raising
>irrigation water productivity, is depleting both
>of its principal aquifers--the coastal aquifer
>and the mountain aquifer that it shares with
>Palestinians. Israels population, whose growth
>is fueled by both natural increase and
>immigration, is outgrowing its water supply.
>Conflicts between Israelis and Palestinians over
>the allocation of water in the latter area are
>ongoing. Because of severe water shortages,
>Israel has banned the irrigation of wheat.
>
>In Mexico--home to a population of 107 million
>that is projected to reach 140 million by
>2050--the demand for water is outstripping
>supply. Mexico Citys water problems are well
>known. Rural areas are also suffering. For
>example, in the agricultural state of
>Guanajuato, the water table is falling by 2
>meters or more a year. At the national level, 51
>percent of all the water extracted from
>underground is from aquifers that are being
>overpumped.
>
>Since the overpumping of aquifers is occurring
>in many countries more or less simultaneously,
>the depletion of aquifers and the resulting
>harvest cutbacks could come at roughly the same
>time. And the accelerating depletion of aquifers
>means this day may come soon, creating
>potentially unmanageable food scarcity.
>
>While falling water tables are largely hidden,
>rivers that are drained dry before they reach
>the sea are highly visible. Two rivers where
>this phenomenon can be seen are the Colorado,
>the major river in the southwestern United
>States, and the Yellow, the largest river in
>northern China. Other large rivers that either
>run dry or are reduced to a mere trickle during
>the dry season are the Nile, the lifeline of
>Egypt; the Indus, which supplies most of
>Pakistans irrigation water; and the Ganges in
>Indias densely populated Gangetic basin. Many
>smaller rivers have disappeared entirely.
>
>Since 1950, the number of large dams, those over
>15 meters high, has increased from 5,000 to
>45,000. Each dam deprives a river of some of its
>flow. Engineers like to say that dams built to
>generate electricity do not take water from the
>river, only its energy, but this is not entirely
>true since reservoirs increase evaporation. The
>annual loss of water from a reservoir in arid or
>semiarid regions, where evaporation rates are
>high, is typically equal to 10 percent of its
>storage capacity.
>
>The Colorado River now rarely makes it to the
>sea. With the states of Colorado, Utah, Arizona,
>Nevada, and, most important, California
>depending heavily on the Colorados water, the
>river is simply drained dry before it reaches
>the Gulf of California. This excessive demand
>for water is destroying the rivers ecosystem,
>including its fisheries.
>A similar situation exists in Central Asia. The
>Amu Darya--which, along with the Syr Darya,
>feeds the Aral Sea--is diverted to irrigate the
>cotton fields of Central Asia. In the late
>1980s, water levels dropped so low that the sea
>split in two. While recent efforts to revitalize
>the North Aral Sea have raised the water level
>somewhat, the South Aral Sea will likely never
>recover.
>
>Chinas Yellow River, which flows some 4,000
>kilometers through five provinces before it
>reaches the Yellow Sea, has been under mounting
>pressure for several decades. It first ran dry
>in 1972. Since 1985 it has often failed to reach
>the sea, although better management and greater
>reservoir capacity have facilitated year-round
>flow in recent years.
>The Nile, site of another ancient civilization,
>now barely makes it to the sea. Water analyst
>Sandra Postel, in Pillar of Sand, notes that
>before the Aswan Dam was built, some 32 billion
>cubic meters of water reached the Mediterranean
>each year. After the dam was completed, however,
>increasing irrigation, evaporation, and other
>demands reduced its discharge to less than 2
>billion cubic meters.
>
>Pakistan, like Egypt, is essentially a
>river-based civilization, heavily dependent on
>the Indus. This river, originating in the
>Himalayas and flowing westward to the Indian
>Ocean, not only provides surface water, it also
>recharges aquifers that supply the irrigation
>wells dotting the Pakistani countryside. In the
>face of growing water demand, it too is starting
>to run dry in its lower reaches. Pakistan, with
>a population projected to reach 305 million by
>2050, is in trouble.
>
>In Southeast Asia, the flow of the Mekong is
>being reduced by the dams being built on its
>upper reaches by the Chinese. The downstream
>countries, including Cambodia, Laos, Thailand,
>and Viet Nam--countries with 168 million
>people--complain about the reduced flow of the
>Mekong, but this has done little to curb Chinas
>efforts to exploit the power and the water in
>the river.
>
>The same problem exists with the Tigris and
>Euphrates Rivers, which originate in Turkey and
>flow through Syria and Iraq en route to the
>Persian Gulf. This river system, the site of
>Sumer and other early civilizations, is being
>overused. Large dams erected in Turkey and Iraq
>have reduced water flow to the once fertile
>crescent, helping to destroy more than 90
>percent of the formerly vast wetlands that
>enriched the delta region.
>
>In the river systems just mentioned, virtually
>all the water in the basin is being used.
>Inevitably, if people upstream use more water,
>those downstream will get less. As demands
>continue to grow, balancing water demand and
>supply is imperative. Failure to do so means
>that water tables will continue to fall, more
>rivers will run dry, and more lakes and wetlands
>will disappear.
>
># # #
>
>Adapted from Chapter 3, Emerging Water
>Shortages in Lester R. Brown, Plan B 2.0:
>Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a
>Civilization in Trouble (New York: W.W. Norton &
>Company, 2006), available free of charge on-line
>at www.earthpolicy.org/Books/PB2/index.htm
>
>The next Plan B 2.0 Book Byte will cover Reducing Urban Water Use.
>
>Additional data and information sources at www.earthpolicy.org
>
>For information contact:
>
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>
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>Tel: (202) 496-9290 x 14
>E-mail: jlarsen (at) earthpolicy.org
>
>Earth Policy Institute
>1350 Connecticut Ave. NW, Suite 403
>Washington, DC 20036
>Web: www.earthpolicy.org
>
>---
>
--
Dr. Tom Trail
International Trails
1375 Mt. View Rd.
Moscow, Id. 83843
Tel: (208) 882-6077
Fax: (208) 882-0896
e mail ttrail at moscow.com
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