This paper is published in Volume-4, Issue-4, 2018
Area
Water Resources
Author
R. A. K. Eswari
Org/Univ
Jawaharlal Nehru Technological University, Kakinada, Andhra Pradesh, India
Keywords
Water stress, Warka water tower, Water harvesting
Citations
IEEE
R. A. K. Eswari. Warka water tower, International Journal of Advance Research, Ideas and Innovations in Technology, www.IJARIIT.com.
APA
R. A. K. Eswari (2018). Warka water tower. International Journal of Advance Research, Ideas and Innovations in Technology, 4(4) www.IJARIIT.com.
MLA
R. A. K. Eswari. "Warka water tower." International Journal of Advance Research, Ideas and Innovations in Technology 4.4 (2018). www.IJARIIT.com.
R. A. K. Eswari. Warka water tower, International Journal of Advance Research, Ideas and Innovations in Technology, www.IJARIIT.com.
APA
R. A. K. Eswari (2018). Warka water tower. International Journal of Advance Research, Ideas and Innovations in Technology, 4(4) www.IJARIIT.com.
MLA
R. A. K. Eswari. "Warka water tower." International Journal of Advance Research, Ideas and Innovations in Technology 4.4 (2018). www.IJARIIT.com.
Abstract
While the concept of water stress is relatively new, it is difficult to obtain sources of fresh water for use during a period of time and may result in further depletion and deterioration of available water resources. Water shortages may be caused by climate change, such as altered weather patterns including droughts or floods, increased pollution, and increased human demand and overuse of water. A water crisis is a situation where the available potable, unpolluted water within a region is less than that region's demand. Water scarcity is being driven by two converging phenomena: growing freshwater use and depletion of usable freshwater resources. Water scarcity can be a result of two mechanisms: physical (absolute) water scarcity and economic water scarcity, where physical water scarcity is a result of inadequate natural water resources to supply a region's demand, and economic water scarcity is a result of poor management of the sufficient available water resources. The increase in demand for water has led to new technology in SOUTH AFRICA. The new technology is named as “WARKA WATER TOWER”.