Showing posts with label Río Paraná. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Río Paraná. Show all posts

14 September 2010

Return to Drought

Wildfires following winter drought in Bolivia, September 2010
Source: NASA Earth Observatory

After three weeks in London where drought is not a problem at the end of the wet summer of 2010, late last week we returned to sere lawns and shriveled bushes and plants in Fairfax. 2010 was a wetter than normal year in northwestern and north-central Europe with above average rainfall in many places and flooding in several places in  Poland and nearby countries even as it produced a severe drought in European Russia. The Russian drought has already been discussed here, and grain prices in world markets have escalated as a consequence. The mid-Atlantic Region, though at a much less severe level than European Russia, is in the midst of a drought.

Last Friday I got a weather advisory warning of the possibility of wildfires in the vicinity of Washington, DC. Over the past week a large wildfire has burned near Boulder, CO, destroying some houses and threatening to destroy others. One expects such fires in arid zones and especially in semi-arid zones like the eastern flank of the Front Range in Colorado where rainfall is adequate for the growth of forest but drought is common. Wildfires and drought are much rarer on the East Coast of the US. Subsequent rains and the cooler days of autumn have reduced the fire danger, but it is sobering to realize that drought-induced wildfires are possible anywhere, even in normally humid places.

Because much of its water supply is "run of river" rather than centered on storage reservoirs, the Washington, DC area is particularly susceptible to water shortages when rainfall is below average and the flow of the Potomac is low. A drought watch has been declared for the region following an abnormally hot and dry summer. Rainfall in July seemed to break the drought of early summer, but August was far below long-term average rainfall, and the year to date is well below the expected rainfall. High temperatures made the situation worse, for evaporation and transpiration rates rise with temperature. A drought watch is now in effect in the Washington area, and it could remain in place for the remainder of the summer and through the autumn, especially as October is normally a drier month than August or September.

Wildfires in south central South America, late August 2010
Source: NASA 

A more interesting drought is the ongoing one in the Amazon basin, especially the southwestern edge of that Basin in Brasil and Bolivia. With normal rainfall of 100-400 cm or more per year, the area is too damp for large wildfires much of the time. There is a distinct dry season in the southern hemisphere winter, and some agricultural burning is normal toward the end of that season. In the abnormally dry winter of 2010 many of those agricultural fires grew to substantial size, and much of the south central portion of the Amazon basin has been plagued with a  smoke pall since August. The dry weather has also resulted in reduced river flows in both the Amazonian and Paraná basins.


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04 July 2010

Hidrovia and Water in South America I

Evening view of the junction of Rio Iguazú (right) with Río Paraná from Argentinian Bank, Brasil to right and Paraguay left (Ciudad del Este high rises in distant background), 2007
©EOP

Water transportation is not going to be a topic for discussion in the course, nor will wildlife conservation issues be emphasized, but they are both related to human water use. At the moment I am also preparing to lead a course on the Southern Cone of South America where the Paraná and its tributaries are important for transportation, for wildlife, and for water supply. The Paraná is navigable for small ocean going ships upstream as far as the Argentinian city of Corrientes, and its branches can be navigated further upstream into Brasil and Paraguay by shallower draft vessels. Landlocked Paraguay has long been dependent on the river for transportation access, and inland Argentinian cities including Corrientes and Rosario are also dependent on river transportation for access to world markets. More recently the commodity production boom in Brasil has greatly increased transportation demand as that country extends its ecumene into the interior.

The Rio de la Plata river system, including the Paraná its largest single stream, is one of the world's great river systems with a flow second only to the Amazon in the Americas.Its flow comes mainly from rainfall in the humid zones of subtropical and tropical southern Brasil, though it is not an exotic river for there is an excess of precipitation over evapo-transpiration in normal years along much of its length. Several huge hydroelectric projects on the Paraná provide much of the power used by Brasil, Argentina and Paraguay and have converted large segments of its upstream basin into slackwater lakes. As yet the Paraguay, a major tributary to the Paraná and navigable in some years into Brasil, has not been dammed.


A problem for navigation is the uneven flow across the year and from year to year. Hidrovia is a project to even out the flow of the Parana by manipulating water in the Pantanal, the immense marshland on the boundary between Brasil and Bolivia. While the project is apparently moribund at the moment, it is likely to be revived. The problem is the Pantanal is one of the world's great wetlands, and one of the largest still largely untouched by human activity. Known for the diversity and density of its wildlife, conservationists argue that it should be preserved in its current state.

In future postings I shall examine Hidrovia in greater detail and look at other aspects of water availability and use in South America.