Hawaii First Water

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Blog
  • Contact

Archives for July 2017

Warming may lead to freshwater stress on many islands around the world

July 16, 2017

(Kobayashi comment:  This article in Nature is about a year old, but is especially key for freshwater planning for islands in the South Pacific and elsewhere.)

Scott and Lindsey:  May 2016

The millions of people—not to mention other animals and plants—living on islands already face unique challenges due to global warming. As seas rise and temperatures climb, islanders may have fewer choices for relocating people, infrastructure, or agriculture than larger countries do. Among the most serious public health and ecological threats facing islands may be freshwater stress. Nearly three-quarters of the islands examined in a recent study were projected to experience much drier conditions by 2050, with the situation worsening by 2090.

The bubble map at top right shows projected changes in freshwater stress by 2090 for 80 island groups around the world. Brown indicates increased freshwater stress, and green indicates decreased stress. The larger the dot, the larger the current population.

The bottom map shows small island groups that may be especially vulnerable by the end of the century due to a combination of drying and expected population growth. (Only the 22 island groups that had their own entry in the World Bank’s nation-specific population database were included in the second analysis.) The size of the dots on this map was determined by multiplying the projected change in freshwater stress in 2090 by the estimated population growth by 2050 (the farthest time horizon available for these islands).

Kris Karnauskas, the lead scientist on the research, explains that when he and his colleagues considered future rainfall changes alone, the models predicted that roughly 50% of small islands would get drier in a warming climate. But when it comes to freshwater stress, rainfall is only half the story. The other half is evaporation, and estimating evaporation from the land surfaces of small islands is something most global climate models—called GCMs, for short—don’t do.

The rest of the article may be purchased from Nature Magazine.

Filed Under: Climate Change, Rainfall, Streams and Rivers, Water Conservation

Rare East Honolulu freshwater spring protected by community

July 16, 2017

July 2017. HONOLULU (AP) – One of the few remaining freshwater springs in East Honolulu will be protected for life after multiple groups came together to purchase it.

County and state officials and East Honolulu community members celebrated on Thursday the $2.6 million public purchase of Kanewai Spring.

The purchase permanently protects a key source of freshwater for Maunalua Bay and opens up the lava tube-fed pool to conservation and education.

The rest of the article is here…

Filed Under: Streams and Rivers, Water Conservation, Water Pollution

(Hawaii) County scrambles to fix wells but repairs more than a week away…

July 3, 2017

July, By Cameron Miculka West Hawaii Today cmiculka@westhawaiitoday.com

HONOKOHAU — Commercial fisherman Tyler Hams makes his living on the water, and that living depends on keeping saltwater out of his motor and his equipment clean.

For that, he needs fresh water.

“I mean, I get it that there’s a water restriction,” Hams said at Honokohau Harbor on Friday. “This is how we make our living.”

Hams was one of many boaters and fishermen at the harbor on Friday who said an emergency restriction on water usage issued the day prior that ordered a halt on washing boats was unworkable.

The notice came down following the failure of the Keahuolu Deepwell and asks North Kona residents and customers to immediately restrict water usage to health and sanitation uses. Four other wells of the 13 that service the area have been inoperable since January.

A separate announcement from the mayor’s office said North Kona residents “must cease all other non-essential water use, including all irrigation and washing of vehicles and boats.”

In an update released Friday afternoon by the Hawaii County Department of Water Supply, the department said the restriction remains in effect and that North Kona residents and customers must continue to restrict their use of water to health and safety purposes.

See the rest of the article here…

Filed Under: Water Conservation, Water Economics, Water Technologies

About Hawaii First Water

This blog focuses on shaping water strategies for the Hawaiian Islands.

Articles

  • Families Demand Answers After Navy Water Main Breaks Near Pearl Harbor
  • The lawsuit over Hawaii’s Red Hill water contamination crisis has drawn in more than 100 new plaintiffs
  • Hawaii Postcards 2050
  • Visions of the Future, Part 2
  • Climate Change In Paradise 2050 Postcards; Visions of the Future?

Categories

  • Climate Change
  • Rainfall
  • Groundwater
  • Water Conservation
  • Water Technologies
  • Renewable Energy

Copyright © 2023 Hawaii First Water · Sitemap · Designed by Websites with Aloha · Log in