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Water Resources Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller

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Page 1: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

Water Resources

Chapter 15APES

Ms. Miller

Page 2: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

Page 3: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

Green Surrounded by Desert….Why Bother??

Page 4: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

Importance of Water (Science and Economics)

Keeps us alive…….60% of our bodies is waterCan only survive without water for a few days

Page 5: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

Water is one of our most poorly managed resources

Global Health Issues: unsafe drinking water and lack of sanitation are biggest cause of illness worldwide.

>2 million people die from waterborne diseases: diarrhea, typhoid fever, and hepatitis …even malaria is linked directly to water.

Page 6: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

Children’s Issue: it is essential for healthy development

a child dies every 8 seconds due to waterborne diseases (diarrhea is the number

one cause of death in children in many African countries)

Page 7: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

Women’s Issue: poor women and girls are often reponsible for finding and carrying daily water supplies.

Page 8: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

National and Global Security Issue: tensions are increasing over shared/limited use of water resources in the Middle East and other areas of the world.

Page 9: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences
Page 10: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

All of our continents have concerns about water use…even Brookfield wants water from Lake Michigan.

Page 11: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

Environmental Issue: excessive withdrawal and pollution leads to…..

Disappearing Species

Page 12: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

Lower water tables:

Page 13: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

Declining fish populations:

Page 14: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

Altered river flowsShrinking lakesLoss of wetlands

Page 15: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

Declining water quality

The earth’s most abundant resource, and still we have trouble finding adequate clean drinking water for nearly 1 billion people worldwide.

Page 16: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

Only 0.024% of the earth’s water is available to use as liquid fresh water.

Page 17: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

The Hydrologic Cycle helps keep fresh water recycling

Page 18: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

Reliable runoff: surface runoff we can count on as a source of freshwater from year to year. Currently use greater than 50% of it but greater needs will push that to 70-90% use by 2025.

Page 19: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

Withdrawal: amount of freshwater we remove from a lake, river or aquifer for any purpose.

Consumptive use: use that does not return water to its original source. Approximately 70% of the water used falls into this category.

Nonconsumptive use: water is not removed, or is returned to an aquifer or surface body of water.

Page 20: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

70% of water withdrawn from lakes, rivers and aquifers is used for irrigation….

Supports 1/5th of the world’s croplandsProduces 40% of the worlds food

Page 21: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

Top Three “Users” of water

#1 Irrigation (70%)#2 Industry (20%)#3 Residences (10%)

Page 22: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

17 water hotspots have been identified in the Western U.S. Which leads to more

intense conflict for fresh water resources

Page 23: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences

Governments vs. Private Corporations???most are currently owned and managed by

governmentsSome governments are selling their water to

private companies like: Vivendi, Suez, and RWE

Build our developments with stakeholders Innovate to meet environmental needs

Conserve resources and promote make employees sustainable the circular economy development actors

Page 24: Chapter 15 APES Ms. Miller. Hydrological Poverty: lack of freshwater available for use which leads to harsh human, environmental and economical consequences