Water wars, oil wars, climate change, global warming, A personal view
21 Aug
According to this article in New Scientist, a new survey of fresh water shows that world supplies are declining at a rate much faster than previously predicted. This study focused on water basins rather than a country by country approach and found that we are 20 years ahead of predicted levels for water loss.
The article has an upside however- the solution in many subsistence agricultural areas is relatively simple: Create systems for storing rainwater in anticipation of drought. As obvious as it sounds, many poor farmers have no means to store water. There are simple plastic inflatable basins similar to swimming pools that can help with storage issues at low costs.
The primary message of articles like this is that we can no longer treat fresh water as an inexhaustible resource. We need to conserve and plan for times when no water falls from the sky. Time to buy a rain barrel.
11 Aug
University of Austin researchers working with NASA satellite data have determined that the Greenland ice sheet is melting three times faster than previously thought. It is currently dumping 57.3 cubic miles of water into the oceans each year. This equates to a half millimeter is ocean rise each year. While that may not seem like much, its important to remember that as melt increases, it accelerates due to the fact that pooling water on its surface is warmer and almost 100% less reflective. It absorbs the sun’s heat instead of reflecting it.
Update: this is adding .6 millimeter of ocean level rise annually. We have been tracking a 1.8 mm annual rise over the last 100 years so this represents a 30% increase from this source alone. over ten years this represents nearly an inch of rise.