conflict over water resources: colorado river
DESCRIPTION
Basic Review of Colorado River Case Study for AS Level GeographyTRANSCRIPT
Conflict over water resources: Case study Colorado River Basin
LO: explain how the water is being managed in the Colorado River basin
Water scarcity hotspots
According to the International Water Management Institute environmental research organisation global water stress is increasing, and 1/3 rd of all people face some sort
of water scarcity. Agricultural uses dominate in the growing need for food.
Little/no water scarcity
Physical water scarcity- not necessarily dry areas but those where over 75% river flows are used by agriculture, industry or domestic consumers
Economic water scarcity- less than 25% rivers used, and abundant supply potential but not reaching the poorest people .
Approaching physical water scarcity – More than 60% river flows allocated, and in the near future these river basins will have physical scarcity
Egypt imports > 50% of its food because of physical scarcity
Australia; diversion ¼ of all water away from
Murray Darling Basin for agriculture
Aral Sea faces environmental catastrophe, although recent attempts to reduce impacts
of river diversions for especially cotton production
R Ganges: physical stress from pollution and over abstraction
Severe water scarcity N China, leading to South North transfer
scheme-see later slide
Ogallala aquifer provides 1/3 all US irrigation water, but is seriously depleted:
the water table is dropping by about 1m/yr.
As a ‘fossil’ reserve, formed probably from past glacial meltwater flows, it
is effectively a finite resource Much of sub Saharan Africa suffers from
economic scarcity from especially poverty but also lack of infrastructural
development . Some 1 bn people involved1
DIFFERENT USERS?Conflicting demands
Water conflicts
SUPPLY?Diminishing
DEMANDS?Rising
•International conflicts i.e. basin crosses national boundaries•Internal conflicts ie within a country•Conservation versus exploitation
PRESSURE POINT- ie need for management.
This is shown spatially as a ‘hotspot’ of conflict, see
map on next slide.Pressure and hence tension
and conflict may be over surface flow and/or
groundwater suppliesDams and diversions and
loss of wetlands are particularly contested.
Population growthConsumer demandIndustrial growth
Agricultural demand
Reductions because of:•Users abstracting/polluting upstream•Deteriorating quality•Impact of climate change
Present and potential water conflict hotspots• As water supply decreases, tensions will increase as different players try to access common water supplies• Many conflicts are transboundary in nature, either between states or countries
Insert Figure 2.11 page 47
River basins currently in dispute
River basins at risk in the future
Large International drainage basins
Zambezi
Orange
Okavango
La Plata
Mekong
Ganges
Ob
Lake Chad
Nile hotly disputed between Ethiopia and Sudan ,who control its headwaters, and Egypt .
Tigris-Euphrates Iraq + Syria concerns that Turkey’s GAP project will divert their water
The Aral Sea, an inland drainage basin, once the world’s 4th largest inland lake has shrunk sine the 1950s after the 2 rivers feeding it: the Amu Dayra and Syr Darya were diverted for irrigation. By 2007 the sea was 10% of original volume and split into 2 lakes. The ex soviet states are in conflict: Uzbekistan , Turkmenistan and Kazakstan.
Colorado: disputes between the 7 US states and Mexico it flows through. The river is so overused, that it no longer reaches the sea!.90% abstracted before reaches Mexico
Note: although there have been rising tensions globally, many areas demonstrate effective management to diffuse the situation and create more equitable and sustainable demand-supply balance, such as the Mekong River Committee,& the Nile River Initiative
Colorado river basin:Geographical location
Name the states who share the River basin
During the past 50 years this once free flowing river has been tamed by a gigantic plumbing system consisting of
• 14 major dams and reservoirs.• hundreds of smaller dams.• a network of aqueducts and canals that supply
water to farmers, ranchers and cities.
Today, this domesticated river provides…..
• electricity (from hydroelectric plants at major dams)• water for more than 25 million people in 7 states• water used to produce about 15% of the nation's produce
and livestock• multi-billion recreation industry of
– whitewater rafting– boating– fishing– camping– hiking
• enjoyed by 15 million people a year.
Why is it like this?
Why is there conflict over the water resources?
Why would these people all have different views?
Solutions?
Glen Canyon and Lake Powell
Take away this tamed river and…..
• Las Vegas, Nevada would be a mostly uninhabited desert area.
• San Diego, California (which gets 70% of its water from the Colorado), could not support its present population.
• California's Imperial Valley (which grows a major portion of the nation's vegetables would consist mostly of cactus and mesquite plants.
Three major problems are associated with use of this river's water:
• the Colorado River basin includes some of the driest lands in the US.
• Legal pacts in 1922 and 1944 allocate more water to the states in the river's upper basin (Wyoming, Utah, Colorado and New Mexico) and lower basin (Arizona, Nevada and California) and to Mexico, than now flows through the river, even in years without a drought.
• because of so many withdrawals, the river rarely makes it to the Gulf of California.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7506405.stmhttp://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7507701.stm
Colorado River drought
• The south-western US is suffering its eighth consecutive year of drought. There are concerns that the Colorado River, which has sustained life in the area for thousands of years, can no longer meet the needs of the tens of millions of people living in major cities such as Las Vegas and Los Angeles. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7506405.
stm
Colorado River case study…..
1. Where is the case study located2. Why is there an issue? (who are the different
users?/ what do they want water for?)3. What was done about it?4. When did this happen?5. Who has benefited?