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Where Did The Water Go?

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Where Did The Water Go?
By Saima Baig On Feb 3, 2018 0
Climate change is one of the most important topics in the world today. The very existence of life on earth is in jeopardy due to increase in global warming. This has largely been the result of anthropogenic interference with the natural systems of the planet. It has come to the point that scientists are now calling this the Anthropocene (human) Epoch because we have, irrevocably in some cases, altered nature by causing mass extinctions, polluting oceans and damaging the atmosphere. The last one is the primary cause of global climate change.

A changing climate together with unsustainable management of ecosystems is likely toimpact both people and nature. These impacts can be environmental (degradation, conversion, effects of increasingly frequent and severe events such as floods and droughts, and ecological changes), social (loss of adaptive capacities, knowledge and institutions; inability to manage for the scale and scope of changes; and loss of livelihood options and resilience), or economic (globalization, trade, markets). In addition, the crisis is likely to impact different groups differently. Natural disasters also tend to worsen the conditions faced by different groups especially the vulnerable and marginalized.

Over the past decade or so, various natural disasters have manifested around the globe and these have included extensive and intensive floods, extreme weather phenomenon, droughts, fires etc. And just last week this has led a group of scientists to move the Doomsday Clock 30 seconds closer to midnight – the symbolic point of humanity’s annihilation based on the probability of global catastrophe.

The Clock might very well be symbolic but the catastrophes it points to are very real. In the last week of January, the River Seine in Paris peaked to about 4 meters above its normal level for the time of year, due to weeks of excessive rainfall. Paris suffered from floods, with around 1,500 people evacuated from their homes and almost the same number of homes without electricity. Railway lines have been out of service and expressways abutting the Seine have been closed. This happened in a major city in a developed country. We do not need to stretch our imagination to consider what would have (and has) happened in countries like Pakistan.

While a considerable part of Pakistan has been affected by devastating floods and continues to be threatened by them, they are not the only problem we can face. Drought is also a major concern and an example of what the country can face was seen in South Africa. On January 15, 2018, it was reported that three years of unprecedented drought has resulted in Cape Town having less than 90 days of water in its reservoirs. This means that Cape Town is well on its way to be the first city in the world to run out of water. It was reported that city authorities have taken the decision to turn off municipal water supplies for all but essential services, such as hospitals, once dams reach 13.5% of capacity. On January 26, residents were told to turn off toilet taps and to shower only twice a week to avoid the supply being cut off.

Pakistan has experienced droughts before but now their intensity is likely to increase. Even though it has many glaciers and river systems, two thirds of the country is in the semi-arid and arid zone, characterized with low rainfall. This, together with melting glaciers, drying rivers and unsustainable water management and harvesting practices means that many cities – such as Karachi – are likely to face the same fate as Cape Town. In Karachi, the situation is already reaching drastic levels. Water is already a scarce and precious commodity, not only for the poor but also for the affluent. Water mafias are the new gangs that rule the city, and while the better off sections of society can purchase water, those dependent on municipal supplies are perhaps already doing what the government of Cape Town is asking its citizens to do.

In 1951, the per capita water availability – as per the Water and Power Development Authority(Wapda) – was 5,650 cubic meters. In 2010, this figure had shrunk to 1,000 cubic meters and is expected to fall to 800 cubic meters in 2025 (that’s just seven years from now), when the country’s population increases to 221 million. It is reported that groundwater levels are already falling by a meter a year.

This growing water deficit is fast pushing Pakistan towards water poverty in the coming decades – a severe challenge for the government and policymakers. Without a sustainable and holistic water strategy and effective policymaking, a lot more cities and towns in the country will suffer the same fate as Cape Town. Perhaps even worse
 
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More than ever we need to be intelligent with our management of water. Even before we start talking about India and dams in Kashmir, we need to consider if we are doing everything we can that doesn't involve going to war.

1. Build small dams and reservoirs to capture the water from the annual flooding and the monsoon rains.
2. Migrate as much farming as feasible to drip irrigration
3. Recycle water. We need proper guttering and water treatment plants in every village, town, city to make sure waste water is filtered and cleaned and put back into the water cycle.
4. We need to stop industry poisoning our water supply. We're all concerned about the lack of water in Pakistan, but how much of it is even safe to drink!
5. Desalination plants all across the coast. All along coastal regions water should be provided from the sea using desalination plants.
6. Prevent water wasteage. The supply network for water must be kept well maintained so pipes aren't leaking water into the ground.
7. Plant forests. We need to act before it's too late. We need to plant forests so we can have more rains. For those of you unaware of how the water cycle works - read this.
 
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We have some google professors here who think there is no Water Problem, all this is propaganda.
 
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2. Migrate as much farming as feasible to drip irrigration

I will add that farming needs to be totally converted to Urban Farming and Vertical Farming as applicable. These will have the following effects :

1. Save water, especially with Vertical Farming where the growth process can be supported by computer control.

2. Make food generation efficient as farming is done at neighborhood-level.

3. Usage of pesticides minimal.

4. Removal pollution from the deliver-to-customer chain.

5. Provide a scientific mode of employment to educated youth who would otherwise venture out into harmful capitalist employment.
Venezuela has had some experience with Urban Farming.
 
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In my stomach

not any more. is it ? :P

On Topic: Unless we change this "don't worry it's for free" mentality. we will suffer. Whenever i stop my friends from wasting water, they say come on, it's for free and it ain't going anywhere. then i tell them to wait for it.

I will add that farming needs to be totally converted to Urban Farming and Vertical Farming as applicable. These will have the following effects :

1. Save water, especially with Vertical Farming where the growth process can be supported by computer control.

2. Make food generation efficient as farming is done at neighborhood-level.

3. Usage of pesticides minimal.

4. Removal pollution from the deliver-to-customer chain.

5. Provide a scientific mode of employment to educated youth who would otherwise venture out into harmful capitalist employment.
Venezuela has had some experience with Urban Farming.


i have a suggestion. Both India and China should nuke each other. Give it a thought.


Kidding :D
 
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4. We need to stop industry poisoning our water supply. We're all concerned about the lack of water in Pakistan, but how much of it is even safe to drink!
A major portion of our population in punjab is forced to drink arsenic poisoned water
desktop-ii.png

7. Plant forests. We need to act before it's too late. We need to plant forests so we can have more rains. For those of you unaware of how the water cycle works - read this.
We have to do plantation in our plains even on prime agri lands which we so far ignore we do plantation on certain localities only
3. Recycle water. We need proper guttering and water treatment plants in every village, town, city to make sure waste water is filtered and cleaned and put back into the water cycle.
Absolutely the amount of waste water we dont utilize could help us solve water shortage of all our major cities
2. Migrate as much farming as feasible to drip irrigration
And give subsidies to small farmers for purchase of the necessary equipment

i have a suggestion. Both India and China should nuke each other. Give it a thought.
Even if india and Pakistan god forbid throw 20 nukes at each other the amount of radioactive dirt in the atmosphere could end up causing a nuclear winter capable of killing not millions but billions due to famine and crop failures that will follow
 
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And give subsidies to small farmers for purchase of the necessary equipment

Farming should be made a collective effort ( a group of farmers working the farm ) and farms should be a nationalized property ( the farm owned by the system on behalf of the people ).

Urban Farming and Vertical Farming lend themselves easily to this kind of thinking.
 
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Farming should be made a collective effort ( a group of farmers working the farm ) and farms should be a nationalized property ( the farm owned by the system on behalf of the people ).
Unless its profitable i dont see that happening our best bet is govt funded farming programs
 
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not any more. is it ? :P

On Topic: Unless we change this "don't worry it's for free" mentality. we will suffer. Whenever i stop my friends from wasting water, they say come on, it's for free and it ain't going anywhere. then i tell them to wait for it.




:D
I always save pani even when washing dishes , I don't waste it .uselessly.
 
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Unless its profitable i dont see that happening our best bet is govt funded farming programs

About profit - the thinking should change from profit for a single individual to benefit for society at large. The socialist way.

Read this article about the Venezuelan experience :


Some pics from Venezeula's Urban Farms :

earth-day-urban-farming-venezuela_51635_600x450.jpg


caracas.jpg


chavez-urban-farming-program-curacas-2012.jpg


image001_edited_wide-8ba375e7ddf5056f31ddb0156d0ec1e047b69b65-s900-c85.jpg
 
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Venezuela has had some experience with Urban Farming
yeah only socialist country has solution :azn:
anyway babalon has hanging garden...
best way, as u described is this.. no pests... and less cleaning is reuired,..
 
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yeah only socialist country has solution :azn:

Well, I just meant that Venezuela has had large government-level support and encouragement for Urban Farming. :)

anyway babalon has hanging garden...
best way, as u described is this.. no pests... and less cleaning is reuired,..

Nice !!

Thanks for sharing the vid.
 
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