Title: Briefing Paper
1You could not step twice into the same rivers
for other waters are ever flowing on to you.
Heraclitus of Ephesus (500 BCE)
2Briefing Paper 1
- Comments, suggestions and what not
3Comments
- Proofread prufread proofreed prufreed
proofreade. Pleeze. - Formatting and structure are important (some
papers were just rambling essays) - If you use place names, be sure that they are
labeled on associated maps (note on place names
Sea of Japan/East Sea)
4- Clarity is important so read each sentence
individually then each paragraph then each
section. What are you trying to say? - Are cause and effect clear? (e.g., salmon catch
on Columbia) - Is there consistency in thought?
- Please use your own words (will need to summarize
from multiple publications)
5- General rule is to write out (alphabetically)
numbers from one to ten and then use numbers gt 11
(except in figures and tables). - Think simplicity succinct(ness) and overall
tightness (ie., avoid redundancies).
6Tables and Figures
- Use selectively
- Pictures are not always worth 1000 words, but
they can be worth more - Make certain they are clear and labeled correctly
7Labeling
- Figures are labeled at bottom Tables at top.
- Figure 1. Map of the Columbia River Basin.
- Table 3. Population of riparian countries in the
Mekong River Basin (Source Wolf, et al., 2004) - Titles should be self-explanatory
- In text, refer to Figure 1 As Figure 1 shows
or (Figure 1) or (Fig. 1)
8Table 1. Cumulative emissions of CO2 since 1950,
top 12 countries.
Source Pew Center, 1999
9Figure 1. Damage from the 1998 ice storm near
Drummondville, Quebec (Source Cohen, 2004)
10Citations
- In text de Villiers (2003) or (de Villiers,
2003) de Villiers (2003a, b, c, etc). If just
name and page s, multiple publications by the
same author poses problems. - Page numbers needed only for direct quotes
(Lonergan, 2003, p. 5) - Or WWF, 2003 (no need to write World Wildlife
Fund, although it should be in references, as WWF
(World Wildlife Fund), 1963. Etc).
11References (not biblio citations, etc)
- List only references that are cited in text (and
vice versa) - Pick a style and then stick to it. Alternatives
APA Manual Strunk and White relevant journal
(most journals have style guidelines in back of
journal at least once a year)CAG Journal - I will be much more picky about citations in
assignment 2
12Jargon
- Be careful with technical language (use only
where appropriate) - Do not use colloquialisms (like dude)
- Beware of malapropisms and homonyms (because the
spell-checker thingie wont pick em up) - Dont use no contractns (and beware of double
negatives)
13If English is not your native language
- Get others to read your work
- If English is your native language get others to
read your work.
14Midterm Answers
- What are the four types of water scarcity?
(include a sentence on each) - Type A Absolute Scarcity
- too little rainfall in comparison with
evaporative demand. - Type B Erratic Rainfall
- dry spells and droughts
- Type C Soil Disturbance
- reduced permeability of soils
- Type D Population Growth
- combination of hydro-climate limitations and pop.
Growth - Lectures
15- Leading up to the Second World Water Forum in
2000, a Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative
Council (WSSCC) was established. In their
report, Vision 21, three key water supply and
sanitation targets were identified. List these. - To reduce by 2015 by one-half the proportion of
people without access to hygienic sanitation
facilities. - To reduce by 2015 by one-half the proportion of
people without sustainable access to adequate
quantities of affordable and safe water. - To provide water, sanitation and hygiene for all
by 2025. - WWDR, Chapt 1.
16- What are the accepted levels of water
availability that defines whether a country is
under water stress or is water scarce? - Water stressed lt 1700 m3/person/year
- Water scarce lt 1000 m3/person/year
- Lectures
17- What is a DALY? How/why is it used?
- DALY stands for Disability-Adjusted Life Year
(or, a DALY is a summary measure of population
health) - It is used to measure the gap between the current
health of a population and an ideal situation
where everyone in that population would live into
old age in full health. (it is measured in terms
of years lost to premature mortality or YLL
and healthy years lost due to disability YLD.
(WWDR-Chapt 1)
18- List the four types of water-related diseases and
give examples of each. - Waterborne Diseases (bacteria in the water)
Cholera or Cryptosporidiosis - Water-washed Diseases (contact with water)
salmonella or E.coli - Water-vectored Diseases (water is the vector or
host) malaria or sleeping sickness - Water-based Diseases (contaminated drinking
water) guinea worm disease or Schistosomiasis - Lectures
19Discuss the concept of Integrated Water Resource
Management.
- IWRM involves managing (or integrating) the
supply side of water resources (both natural
resources surface water and groundwater and
non-conventional resources such as brackish
water and waste water) along with the demand
side. Demands include consumptive uses from
agriculture, industry and residences as well as
non-consumptive uses such as hydropower,
navigation and recreation. - Lectures WWDR
202. Discuss the benefits and difficulties in
pricing water.
- Pricing water promotes more efficient use. It
also reduces demand so that infrastructure does
not get overbuilt. (Examples in class include
Edmonton vs Calgary Middle East). - Problems include
- Requires measurement of actual use (not always
possible) - Difficult to administer
- Water pollution damages do not exist (so charging
for wastewater is difficult) - Issues of equity (Lectures)
213. In my discussion on water and security in the
Middle East, I described water as a Strategic
Resource. Provide an explanation on what this
means, and give examples
- Resources as strategic goals. Historical
accounts blatant discrimination in water
pricing, allocation and delivery - Resources as strategic targets. Cutting water
supply to Jerusalem in 1948 National water
carrier development - Resources as strategic tools. Discussions on
cutting water to Beirut in 1982 Cut electricity
(but not water) to Jalazun refugee camp during
the first intifada Total control over water by
the Military Authority. - Resource inequities as roots to conflict. This
could include discrimination in pricing lack of
access to wells Nigerian oil (not sharing
profits with the population) . - Environmental services and conditions as roots to
conflict. Diversion of saline springs into Lower
Jordan Deep well drilling has affected shallow
Palestinian wells. (Lectures)
224. How might global warming affect water
resources?
- Change in precipitation
- Increased Evaporation
- Sea-level rise (coastal erosion wetlands
salt-water intrusion into aquifers) - Increase in extreme events
- Increased climate variability (droughts floods
heat waves famines) - Permafrost melting
- Glacial Melting (irrigation and drinking water)
- Increased malaria
235. What are creeping dead zones? How are they
created?
- Dead zones are hypoxic areas along certain coasts
(from algal blooms). - They are created by an overload of nitrogen which
travels in rivers to the coast. Caused mainly
by - Fertilizer
- Fossil fuel production/consumption
- Human and animal wastes
246. Discuss the various components of the Reform
Agenda promoted by the World Bank to address the
water problems of developing countries.
- Adopt Integrated Water Resource Management
- Link sector needs with water policy, resource
allocation and mgmt - Central policy-making and local management
- Problems in pricing, fragmentation of decision
making health concerns - Use water more efficiently and reduce pollution
- Promote efficient use through technical
instruments and economic incentives. - Resource pricing, water banking and modernization
of conveyance and distribution systems - Improve partnerships among NGOs, government and
the private sector - Decentralized and participatory approaches
- Private sector participation (services, mgmt)
- Enhance supply
- Desalination
- Imports (tanker, pipeline)
- Virtual water
- Promote partnerships regional and international
- Better technical and financial cooperation on
water issues - World Bank Regional Water Initiative
251. Discuss the changes affecting water supply and
quality over the next twenty years.
- Population growth
- Industrialization in developing countries (need
fertilizer and pesticides trade in toxic waste
lack of water pollution regulations use of
outdated technology - Urbanization in developing countries (lack of
adequate sanitation water-related disease
affects poor and children) - Changing land use (ag development, e.g., coffee
and flowers in Kenya) - Deforestation (releases nutrients from soils)
- Conversion of wetlands (natural pollutant sinks)
- Climate Change
- Millennium Development Goal related to access to
freshwater may help - WWDR, Chapter 1 Lectures