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Australia's war on drought.


Watering the lawn and washing the car are quintessential parts of summer. Yet, in some parts of Australia these activities are illegal. That's because water is fast becoming the most precious commodity Down Under, so precious that every major urban center is under heavy water restrictions, and scientists are scouring the land for more water.

The shortage results partly from changing weather patterns--rain is falling at different times of the year and in shorter bursts. Australia is uniquely vulnerable to climate change, given the proportion of its relatively small land mass to the ocean that surrounds it; sea surface variations such as those seen with the El Nino-Southern Oscillation have a more profound effect here. According to the governmental State of the Environment 2006 report, Australia--though a land of many climates--is overall the driest inhabited continent in terms of rainfall and streamflow Streamflow, or channel runoff, is the flow of water in streams, rivers, and other channels, and is a major element of the water cycle. It is one component of the runoff of water from the land to waterbodies, the other component being surface runoff. .

Increased urbanization also plays a role. "The southeastern part of Australia where most people live is getting hotter and drier," says Tom Hatton, director of the Water for a Healthy Country Flagship, the water research arm of Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) is the national government body for scientific research in Australia. It was founded in 1926 originally as the Advisory Council of Science and Industry.  (CSIRO CSIRO Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organization (Australia) ). "If you project the demand of the five or six largest cities in the next twentyfive years, those cities are going to need up to forty percent more water, which we simply don't have."

CSIRO, in partnership with universities, governments, and private research agencies, has undertaken a massive project to find that water, spending AUS AUS
abbr.
Army of the United States
$80 million per year to find ways to increase the value that the country derives from water. One such innovation is the use of so-called Fleck sensors to monitor groundwater salinity, flow, and levels in virtual real time in a key agricultural area of Queensland. These wireless devices, which fit in the palm of a hand, feature long-range communication and solar recharging capabilities. The data they yield can be used, for example, to alert nearby sugarcane farmers if they are pumping too much ground-water before coastal seawater intrudes into the watershed.

The Fleck sensors are just one part of CSIRO's larger Water Resources Observation Network (WRON WRON Wojskowa Rada Ocalenia Narodowego (former Polish military government organization)
WRON Water Resources Observation Network (Australia)
WRON Wavelength Routed Optical Network
). The goal of the network is to collect current data quickly and accurately. "To produce a national report on water resources using manual methods would be hugely costly, [and] takes about six months and an army of people producing reports that are almost instantly out of date," says WRON manager Ross Ackland. "We need information systems that can produce something much quicker."

The network is organizing all water information using a common framework. Some 100 to 200 different governmental, utility, industry, and research organizations currently collect water resource data, most of which is in proprietary formats. However, the new Web 2.0 technology of data aggregators--a news RSS feed is one well-known example--can help gather Australia's water information together. Visitors to the WRON website can download a Mac or Windows "widget Pronounced "wih-jit," for decades, the term has been a popular word for a generic "thing" when there is no real name for it. It is often used to describe examples of made-up products along with other fictitious names; for example, "10 widgets, 5 frabbits and 2 dingits. " that collects data on Australia's dam levels and assimilates them into a standard format.

Although better management of water resources may help save water, it won't create more potable water--but desalination desalination
 or desalting

Removal of dissolved salts from seawater and from the salty waters of inland seas, highly mineralized groundwaters, and municipal wastewaters.
 plants can. That's why the Water for a Healthy Country Flagship is also researching better ways to desalinate de·sal·i·nate  
tr.v. de·sal·i·nat·ed, de·sal·i·nat·ing, de·sal·i·nates
To desalinize.



de·sal
 and recycle water. In May 2007, CSIRO and nine of Australia's universities combined their research efforts to form the Advanced Membrane Technologies for Water Treatment Research Cluster, with the goal of reducing the energy requirements of desalination by up to 50% and developing new materials to improve membrane performance.

Many desalination plants force water through semipermeable membranes to reduce salts and contaminants. Over time, these contaminants build up on the membrane, requiring cleaning or replacing and more energy to force water through the membrane's shrinking area. CSIRO is therefore exploring the use of membranes that bristle bristle

1. the thick strong animal fibers collected at commercial abattoirs for use in brushes.

2. the sharp serrated awns of grass and some cereal seeds that confer a capacity to penetrate normal skin and mucosa and to cause ulcerative stomatitis, grass seed abscess and the like.
 with carbon nanotube "forests," which trap contaminants while letting water flow through almost without friction, allowing a lower-energy method of desalination.

The CSIRO Water Reuse Technologies project is also tackling the hot issue of water reuse and recycling with a little help from Mother Nature, injecting wastewater into underground aquifers to remove a variety of pathogens, endocrine disruptors, and disinfection disinfection,
n the process of destroying pathogenic organisms or rendering them inert.

disinfection, full oral cavity,
n a procedure used to reduce active periodontal disease, usually completed within a certain short time frame.
 by-products. The rate of contaminant contaminant /con·tam·i·nant/ (kon-tam´in-int) something that causes contamination.

contaminant

something that causes contamination.
 decay depends on the geochemical composition and biotic communities present in the aquifer. One town south of Perth reuses sewage water for irrigation irrigation, in agriculture, artificial watering of the land. Although used chiefly in regions with annual rainfall of less than 20 in. (51 cm), it is also used in wetter areas to grow certain crops, e.g., rice.  after it spends only 30 to 40 days in an aquifer. The lead scientist on the project, Simon Toze, says, "The phosphates are probably removed by chemical properties or absorbed by limestone, whereas most of the nitrogen and pathogens are taken out by organisms using the contaminants as a food source." This practice not only improves water quality but may also give Australians a cheap and practical way to store water--a large concern as regular rainfall becomes more sporadic.

You can't just grow forever and hope that the environment will take care of itself.

Tim Flannery, Australian environmentalist environmentalist

a person with an interest and knowledge about the interaction of humans and animals with the environment.
 
COPYRIGHT 2007 National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:NATURAL RESOURCES
Author:Stemp-Morlock, Graeme
Publication:Environmental Health Perspectives
Date:Jul 1, 2007
Words:810
Previous Article:Erratum.(Correspondence)(Correction notice)
Next Article:Mutagenic mix.(CHEMICAL EXPOSURES)



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