Showing posts with label Water. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Water. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Water: Water, Water Not Everywhere

by Olga Bonfiglio

Without water, nothing can live.  And in the Western United States, there isn't much of it because the region is a desert.

"Everything yearns to be alive in the desert," says Riley Mitchell, a park ranger at Capitol Reef National Park in southern Utah. 

For example, short, clumpy trees grow in the cracks of rock where they find even the least bit of soil.  Look a little closer and you see vegetation surviving in this land and that includes many flowering plants.  Lizards scurry across your path in order to alter their body temperature, which gets too cold under a rock or too hot in the sun.

In the desert everything living screams for water, including your own body.  You don't sweat in its dry heat.  Your lips crack and your skin dries as your body dehydrates.  If you haven't taken care to consume enough water you'll know it because you'll feel faint.   

Consequently, the key concern of the West is water.  Patient and persistent rivers have largely carved the topography of this region over millions of years until today they are gentle streams or silvery sheens of leftover salt and gypsum lying on a dry riverbed glistening in the sun.  Here a river valley is said to be any place where water might have run through it over the past 100 years. 

More of these dry river valleys are appearing as the decade-long drought continues.  Some people claim this drought is the worst on record--and maybe over the past 1,400 years.  
READ MORE

Water: Coastal Cities Living on the Edge



by John Tibbitts, Environmental Health Perspectives -- November 2002

In one of the greatest human migrations of modern times, people are flocking to coastlines around the world. People in developing countries have relocated from the countryside to towns and cities of every size during the past 50 years. But the most dramatic population growth has occurred in giant coastal cities, particularly those in Asia and Africa. Many experts argue that cities will have to cope with almost all of the population growth to come in the next two decades, and much of this increase will occur in coastal urban centers.

Cities concentrate people and businesses—and their wastes. Yet most large cities around the world lack adequate provisions for treating their domestic and industrial wastes, which pour into coastal waters. At the same time, booming cities are sprawling across coastal environments, destroying important resources. These problems and the scale of population growth are most alarming in the tropics. Some coastal cities in the tropics are doubling their population in just a decade, so the pace of
ecosystem change is much greater there.

Cities Take Center Stage
In 1950, New York City was the planet’s only “megacity,” defined as a city with more than 10 million people. Now there are 17 megacities around the globe, and 14 are located in coastal areas. Eleven of today’s megacities are located in Asia, and the fastest-growing ones are located in the tropics. The United Nations (UN) Population Division anticipates four new megacities by 2015, including Tianjin,
Istanbul, Cairo, and Lagos. All but Cairo are located on coastlines.

But megacities are just one part of the population boom in coastal areas. Two-fifths of the world’s major cities of 1–10 million people are also located near coastlines. In 2001, almost 3 billion people worldwide lived in an urban center—generally defined as a town or city of more than 1,000–2,000 people—and by 2030 that number will likely increase to 5 billion. This population growth will be especially heavy in coastal urban areas of less-developed countries. By contrast, the percentage of people living in cities in North America, South America, Europe, and Japan is expected to remain stable at 75–85%.

Coastal populations on every continent have exploded as global trade has flowed into coastal nations through international ports, creating jobs and economic growth. The world economy grew more than fivefold between 1950 and 1990. The internationalization of finance, production, and services, plus
advances in information technology and cheap labor, reduced physical boundaries around the world. Cities such as São Paulo, Buenos Aires, and Jakarta prospered after deregulation of financial markets, and their urban cores flourished with Western-style, high-income commercial and residential gentrification.

Rapid development and population growth are causing similar problems along shorelines around the world, according to a report in the January–March 2000 issue of Coastal Management by Stephen Olsen, director of the Coastal Resources Center at the University of Rhode Island, and Patrick Christie, a research assistant professor at the University of Washington’s School of Marine Affairs. Important habitats such as wetlands, coral reefs, sea grasses, and estuaries are being degraded or destroyed. Changes in the volume and quality of freshwater inflows to estuaries have affected water quality. As a result, estuary dependent fish and shellfish populations and their associated fisheries are declining.

Moreover, fishermen are losing access to their fishing grounds. Resorts, hotels, and condominiums are usually built in attractive bays, inlets, and creeks that fishermen have traditionally used as docking facilities and fishing grounds. In many coastal areas, tourism drives up the cost of shorefront land,
making it difficult for fishermen to live and work there. At some point, fishermen lack a place to sustain the infrastructure they need to ply their trade.    READ MORE

Water: Climate Change Begets Delta Urbanism


by Olga Bonfiglio
 
The famous canals of The Netherlands are not just unique tourist attractions. They are water control systems that help the Dutch in their battle against the ever-encroaching North Sea. Now this tiny country is faced with a new, more grave challenge: rising seas caused by climate change.

“Climate change leaves us with no way back,” said Renée Jones-Bos, ambassador of The Netherlands to the United States. “We must rethink our cities and inhabitants because climate change is shattering any notion of having water under our control. We must realize that we can't use any land for any purpose.”

She spoke recently at the annual conference of the American Planning Association (APA) in New Orleans about “Delta Urbanism,” her country’s new concept of water control for cities located on deltas.
Delta urbanism addresses the water landscape as well as flood risk mitigation, urban design, green buildings, green roofs and climate proofing and other technologies that cope with sustainability and resiliency issues.

“The key is sophisticated, integrated water management and sound urban planning,” said Jones-Bos.
READ MORE 

Water: The Fate of New Orleans Hangs in an Uncomfortable Balance With Mother Nature

by Olga Bonfiglio

Hurricane Katrina demonstrated the havoc Mother Nature can play on a modern city.

It also brought to light the way our concerns about economics can compromise people's safety when we attempt to control nature.

Over one million people in the Gulf area were affected by "the storm," as residents call it, including just about everyone in New Orleans. Ninety percent of this 485,000-person city evacuated as 125,000 homes were severely damaged and 250,000 homes were summarily destroyed.

"The 150 mph winds from the east funneled water into the man-made navigation canals and the Category 5 surge strength made the levees breach starting with the 17th Street Canal of the Industrial Canal," said Richard Campanella, associate director of Tulane University's Center for Bioenvironmental Research and a research professor with Tulane's Department of Earth and Environmental Science. "Sixteen feet of water poured into an area that was four feet below sea level. That caused a flood of 20 feet in St. Bernard Parish and the Lower 9th Ward. This area had been developed after Hurricane Betsy [of 1965]."

"There was no electricity and the city was empty, with no sound, no birds and in complete darkness," said Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-Louisiana), relating her feelings a few days after the storm as she looked over the city from a high bridge. The born and bred Orleanian and former mayor found Katrina's damage to be an unbelievable "out of body experience."

They both spoke at the annual conference of the American Planning Association (APA) recently, which focused on the effects of Katrina and the recovery effort.   READ MORE

Water: Blue Bayou

 by Olga Bonfiglio

It's morbidly painful to see ecological disaster strike at southern Louisiana-again. At risk now are the wetlands-the bayous.

The bayou is French for slow-moving waterway. In Louisiana it is an offshoot of the Mississippi River that forms a delta at the river's mouth. 

It took a thousand years of annual spring flooding for the silt and sediments to develop this region. But it's taken only the past 60 years to endanger it and the oil and gas industry is at the center of this destruction. 

But the threat to the bayous didn't happen last month with the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon rig. 
Oil rigs began to appear in the brackish coastal areas of the Gulf in the early 1930s when the Texas Company (Texaco) developed the first mobile steel barges for drilling. After World War II, other companies began to build fixed off-shore platforms near southern Louisiana. Today the Gulf hosts about 4,000 platforms. 

Since 1950, an 8,000-mile system of canals has been constructed in the bayous- with channels 15 to 25-feet wide and six to seven-feet deep-to accommodate the transport of oil-related equipment.
READ MORE

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Mobile Phones and Mapping Are Next Big Tools for Water Sector

We're quickly approaching 7 billion people on the planet. And as the number of people goes up, the amount of fresh water we have access to is on the decline. The water sector is one area where intelligent use of technology will go a long way in helping us maintain stable supplies. We know that smart meters for water supplies will help us avoid a water crisis -- New York City and California are already testing out this new technology -- but there are other, cheaper technologies that can help too: cell phones and maps.

Circle of Blue reports, "Among the most popular and effective new tools are mobile phones and mapping technologies that rely on rising access to wireless Internet connections and cloud computing to facilitate the flow of information... By deploying this and other new technologies--including data monitoring and water quality testing--water advocates and service organizations are taking a serious look at project outcomes in order to learn from their failures."

The tools help governments and aid groups improve their performance in getting water to those who need it, and the customers gain access to information about their water supplies. Indeed, while much of the developing world doesn't have access to some of the basics we've grown to think of as essential as air, like internet connection, they do have access to one of the over 5 billion cell phones on the planet. We've noted often how cell phones can now help people accomplish everything from farmers avoiding conflict with wildlife to checking market prices that day for their harvests, and yes, even better irrigation practices. While smart water technology is set to be an over $16 billion market in a few years, utilizing these devices is proving to be a perfect way to watch supplies and reach customers.

Ari Olmos, a NextDrop project member, told Circle of Blue, "A service like this wouldn't have worked five years ago," he said, "but now there are so many phones in urban areas that the service seems feasible."

What's wonderful about the proliferation of cell phones is that they've allowed us to connect people to one another, no matter their status level. And we can also, as odd as it seems, better connect to our environment thanks to the tiny devices. Citizen science projects utilizing cell phones for monitoring and tracking things from plant life to pollution levels to the impact of roads on wild animals are also allowing us to track water use.

Through cell phones, and open-source software like Google Maps, non-profits can track how well their efforts are working and improve their services, and providers can show real-time information about how much water is available, and when it will be available, allowing consumers to better budget their supplies. Eventually, cell phones and mapping software could play an incredibly significant role in ensuring everyone has access to water.

The Sahara Forest Project

Sahara Forest Project Developed Project image


The Sahara Forest Project proposes to use two separate technologies together,Concentrated Solar Power (CSP) and Seawater Greenhouses, to provide an array of sustainable energy and agricultural solutions, in the usually inhospitable desert environment, through the desalination of seawater into freshwater.


Much more at TreeHugger [via Gizmodo]

Floating Bike Path is One Response to Rising Waters

floating bike path image


The bike path is designed out of foamed concrete, which floats on the water but is stable. This may be particularly valuable because of its applicability in the context of climate adaptation.


TreeHugger via Gizmodo

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Quality of Life -- notes from Week 1 Thursday

Here are the notes we made on the board today regarding our ideas about our visions of what cities could be.

I'm posting them so that we can use this blog for continued dialogue.  So, add your comments and concerns regarding this list.

Also consider the questions about who decides what are cities are like and what our cities are for.  You might incorporate the readings in your comments.

access to good food and services
green space
walkable spaces
public space
community
public transit
trust
cleanliness
access to recreation
population control
safety -- police
communal thinking
share information -- transparency
schools, museums, heritage
regulations...."zoning"
infrastructure
chocolate factory
employment opportunities
wealth
know the people around you
diversity
community as the classroom
local economy + global economy
happiness
equity (i.e., access to good food, services)
quality for the world
dialogue
democracy -- republic
longevity