CHAPTER 8 - APPENDICES
Edition 5, July, 2007
(8-A) -
Conversion Factors-Precise - [A1] Lengths, [A2] Area, [A3] Weights, [A4] Volumes,[A1] - Conversion Factors - Length:
1.0 meter (m. or m)~ | 3.281 ft.
1.0 ft.~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ | 0.3048 m.
[A2] - Conversion Factors - Area:
[A3] - Conversion Factors - Weights:
[A4] - Conversion Factors - Volumes:
SECTION (8-B) - Conversion Factors - Imprecise -
Water required to produce our daily food is around 2000 liters (per day?) (06H1). Comments: How much of this is water use, and how much is water consumption?
Amounts of Water Used to Grow Food
(in liters evapo-transpired per kilogram of food).Producing a ton of harvested grain consumes about 1000 tons of water (varying with type of grain and climate). This figure includes the grain's evapo-transpiration needs, but not water lost due to inefficiencies in irrigation methods (
96P3).Water requirement for:
- 1 kg of cereal: 1.5 m3 of water.
- 1 kg of poultry fresh: 6 m3 of water.
- 1 kg of meat bovine fresh: 15 m3 of water.
- 1 bovine head: 4,000 m3 of water. (
[B1] - Conversion of Water to Biomass:
The process of evapo-transpiration produces a global average of about 2 grams (dry weight) of biomass/ kg. (liter) of water (Ref. 9 of (96P2)). (Total terrestrial Net Primary Production = 132 billion tonnes/ year (dry weight) (Ref. 8 of (96P2)), and global terrestrial evapo-transpiration = 69,600 km3, so 132x1015 g/ year / 69.6x1015 l/ year = 2 g/ liter) (=2 kg/ 1000 kg. water).
[B2] - Converting Irrigated Land to Food:
Israel's irrigation system can feed 1000 people/ km2
- compared to a global average of 250/ km2 (77A2). Comments: These values may neglect animal-protein needs or the equivalent.
[B3] - Converting irrigation water to food:
Producing 1 tonne of the following food and fiber products requires: 1400 m3
of irrigation water for corn; 4700 m3 for rice, and 17,000 m3
for cotton (Ref. 54 of (94K1)).
1 m3 (1 tonne) of water are needed to produce 1 kg. of most grains (98P1).
An acre of corn requires 0.5 million gallons of water per growing season (0.47 million m3/ km2) (76P1). Comments: Compare this number to the fact that, during one growing season, corn transpires water at 400,000 m3/ km2, and its soil transpires 200,000 m3/ km2 (Ref. 55 and 56 of (95P1)).
An acre of rice requires 1.5 million gallons of water per growing season (1.4 million m3/ km2) (76P1).
1000 tonnes water produce 1 tonne of wheat (normally) (99P1).
3000 tonnes water produce 1 tonne of wheat in hot, arid Saudi Arabia (99P1).
Half as much water is needed to produce a ton of wheat as a ton of rice (91B2).
100 m3 of water are needed to produce 1 kg. of beef (98P1).
A corn crop that produces 700 tonnes/ km2 of grain will take up and transpire 0.42 million m3/ km2 of water during its growing season (94K1).
To grow 1.0 kg. of cotton requires 660 gallons of irrigation water in Uzbekistan (81F1).
[B4] - Conversion of Grain harvest rate to people fed:
0.3 tonne/ year = 1 person (China) (98B3)
[B5] - Conversion of water to steel:
23-56 m3/ tonne (China) Less than 6 m3/ tonne (US, Japan, Germany) (98B3).
[B6] - Conversion of water to paper:
450 m3/ tonne (China); Less than 200 m3/ tonne (industrial countries) (98B3).
NOTE: This document sometimes gives numbers in English units. However the preferred system of units is the metric system. (metric tons (tonnes) (or "t"), meters (m) and kilometers (km)) since only one or two of the 180+ nations of the world persist in using cumbersome English units. Even in the US, nearly all technical, scientific, and medical documents use metric units.
In this document, km2, km3, etc. mean (km)2, (km)3, etc.
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acre-ft.:
The volume occupied by an acre of water one ft. deep.SECTION (8-D) - Information Sources and Organizations -
AFT01 American Farmland Trust, 1717 Massachusetts Ave. NW, Suite 601, Washington DC 20036, (Nov. 1984)
CCN01 Carrying Capacity Network, 2000 P Street NW, Suite 240, Washington, DC 20036 (202-296-4548 or 1-800-466-4866; fax 202-296-4609. They put out numerous publications on various carrying capacity issues.
ELF01 Earthlife Foundation (USA), Suite 700, 1990 M Street N.W., Washington DC 20036 (202-223-4300). See Global Perspectives Quarterly, Fall 1983, Gerald O. Barney and Patricia Maimon, eds. , p. 11. (They undertake sustainable development projects (business opportunities).)
SECC1 Southeast Alaska Conservation Council, P.O. Box 021692, Juneau, Alaska 99802, or c/o Nat. Audubon Soc., 801 Pennsylvania Av. S.E., Wash. DC 20003
GPQ01 Global Perspectives Quarterly, Gerald O. Barney and Patricia Maimon, eds., P.O. Box 33247, Decatur GA 30033 (a newsletter) (as of 1983)
JOHNH John Hopkins, 409 Jardin Place, Davis, CA 95616 (916-756-6455) (as of Dec. 1988) (Chair of Sierra Club Public Lands Committee)
PDMI1 Prospective Decision Models, Inc., Commercial and Academic Applications, Dept. 23645, Mercantile Road, Beachwood, OH 44122 (See Global Perspectives Quarterly, Fall 1983, p. 6) They do global modeling ala M. Mesarovic.
ROSES Rose Strickland, 619 Robinson Ct., Reno, NV 89503 (as of 12/88) (Chair of Sierra Club Range Committee).
SIERR The Sierra Club's Hazardous Materials/Water Resources Newsletter may be obtained from Doris Cellarius, Editor, HM/WR Newsletter, P.O. Box 474, Olympia, WA 98507 (11/10/83 Nat. News Report).
TURNF Turner Foundation, Inc., P.O. Box 550026, Atlanta, GA 30355 (404-681-9900) Founded in 1990 to support non-profit organizations in their work to preserve the Earth and its elements. It supports activities that draw attention to the issue of the human carrying-capacity of the Earth.
UCS01 Union of Concerned Scientists, 2 Brattle Square, P.O. Box 9105, Cambridge, MA 02238-9105. They do a variety of types of advocacy in issues that include population, agriculture and the environment.
WEC01 World Environment Center, 605 Third Ave. 17th Floor, New York NY 10158 (See Global Perspectives Quarterly, Fall, 1983, p.4) They publish "World Environment Report" twice monthly.
WRI01 World Resources Institute, 1750 New York Ave., Suite 230, Washington DC, 20006, (as of 1987) 1709 New York Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20006 (1995). They publish numerous books on natural resource issues.
WWINS Worldwatch Institute, 1776 Massachusetts Ave. NW, Wash. DC 20036 (as of 1992) (202-452-1999; fax 202-296-7365. They publish numerous books and reports on carrying-capacity issues.
SECTION (8-E) - Databases -
The FAOSTAT Database:
The FAO's massive compilation of data on issues related to agriculture, forest management, grazing lands, fisheries and other related issues can be accessed by visiting http://apps.fao.org. Access to the FAOSTAT database itself costs about $1200/ year for residents of developed countries. (Access is free to residents of developing nations.)
The AQUASTAT Database:
The Land and Water Development Division of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations has a number of huge and very useful databases that are available through its website. Start by going to http://www.fao.org/ag/agl/aglw/aquastat/countries/index.htm
It gives you a drop-down list of 138 countries and regions that you can chose from. (Some are in Spanish and some are in French, though most are in English.). Once you have downloaded the country or region of interest you will see a map of the country or region, followed by text and tabular information on the country. Below are some examples of the sorts of information that you can obtain from this database.
Land area// the capital// the total cultivated area// the cultivated area under permanent crops// the cultivated area under annual crops// the size of the average farm// the population// population growth rate// population density// the fraction of the GDP that is derived from agriculture and livestock// the percent of the population that is employed in agriculture// the climate// average rainfall// the magnitude of the groundwater resources// the percent of the groundwater resource that returns to the sea as base flow to the rivers// the rate of groundwater abstraction// the magnitude of the invasion of saltwater into the groundwater tables// the magnitude of subsidence problems that result from excessive abstraction of ground water// the magnitude of the annual renewable water resources// the magnitude of the problem of river water contamination by raw sewage// the number and capacity of dams and reservoirs// gross hydropower potential// water usage by agriculture, industrial and domestic users// the land area under irrigation// the irrigation potential// trends in poverty// area of tidal and non-tidal swampland// trends in food self-sufficiency// the magnitude of flooding problems// and other data.
Another useful database found on the FAO website is at http://www.fao.org/ag/agl/aglw/aquastat/infosystems/index.stm It provides links to other information systems, databases and spatial datasets related to the field of water resources and agriculture.
Another useful database found on the FAO website is at http://www.fao.org/ag/agl/aglw/aquastat/dbase/index.stm This database provides information on water and agriculture by country in the following categories: Land use and population// Climate and water resources// Water use by sector and by source// irrigation and drainage development, and// Environment and health. This AQUASTAT database can be queried on-line, and the query results can be downloaded in CSV format.
Another useful database found on the FAO website is at http://www.fao.org/ag/agl/aglw/aquastat/sediment/index.asp This gives you a huge database of global river sediment yields in worldwide rivers and reservoirs. It is searchable by river, country and continent.
See "Estimated Withdrawals from Principal Aquifers in the US 2000" by Molly A. Maupin and Nancy L. Barber, Circular 1279, U.S. Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey 46 pages, 7.69 MB. See http://www.usgs.gov/
2005 World Population Data Sheet of the Population Reference Bureau
http://www.prb.org/pdf05/05WorldDataSheet_Eng.pdf (304 KB) tabulates, by country and by region, areas of Countries or regions in units of square miles.The following data is tabulated on a country-, regional and global basis in FAO's "
World Resources 2005" (14.6 MB) available at http://pdf.wri.org/wrr05_full.pdfThe FAO online AQUASTAT
http://www.fao.org/ag/agl/aglw/aquastat/dbase/index2.jsp database provides information on water and agriculture (with some data on population and land degradation) by countries organized by categories such as land use, water use, land under irrigation, sources of irrigation, techniques, drainage, crops and intensification, and more. (2/11/05) A massive amount of easy-to-use, tabular, global and national data is given on this website. Below is a list of the tables and their column headings found on this website.TABLE 2 - Water Resources Data
Col.1 - Continent
Col.2 - Country
Col.3 - Average Precipitation (1961-1990) (mm./ year)
Col.4 - Average Precipitation (1961-1990) (km3/ year)
Col.5 - Total renewable water Resources (km3/ year)
Col.6 - Groundwater produced internally (km3/ year)
Col.7 - Surface water produced internally (km3/ year)
Col.8 - Overlap in Surface- & Groundwater (km3/ year)
TABLE 3 - Land Under Irrigation
Col.1 - Continent
Col.2 - Country
Col.3 - Irrigation Potential (ha)
Col.4 - Year of Irrigation Data
Col.5 - Full/ Partial Control of Irrigation (ha)
Col.6 - Spate Irrigation (ha)
Col.7 - Equipped Wetlands (ha)
Col.8 - Total Irrigation (ha)
Col.9 - Other Cultivated Wetlands (ha)
Col.10 - Deep Water/ Flood Recession Cropping Area (ha)
Col.11 - Water-Managed Area (ha) (sum of previous 4 columns)
TABLE 4 - Source of Irrigation Water
Col.1 - Continent
Col.2 - Country
Col.3 - Full/Partial Control of irrigation area irrigated with surface waters (%)
Col.4 - Full/Partial Control of Irrigation area irrigated with ground water (%)
Col.5 - Full/ Partial Control of Irrigation area irrigated with non-conventional sources (%)
TABLE 5 - Irrigated Crops and Intensification
Col.1 - Continent
Col.2 - Country
Col.3 - Part of equipped area actually irrigated (%)
Col.4 - Irrigated Crops (ha)
Col.5 - Portion of grain production irrigated (%)
TABLE 6 - Population (2000)
Col.1 - Continent
Col.2 - Country
Col.3, 4, 5 - Total Population, Rural Population, Urban Population
TABLE 7 - Water Use (FAO Estimates for the Year 2000)
Col.1 - Continent
Col.2 - Country
Col.3 & 4 - Agricultural Water Use (km3/ year and %)
Col.5 & 6 - Domestic Water Use (km3/ year and %)
Col.7 & 8 - Industrial Water Use (km3/ year and % )
Col.9 - Total Water Use (km3/ year)
TABLE 8 - Irrigation Techniques
Col.1 - Continent
Col.2 - Country
Col.3, 4, 5 - Surface Irrigation (ha), Sprinkler Irrigation (ha), Micro-irrigation (ha)
TABLE 9 - Environment - Drainage
Col.1 - Continent
Col.2 - Country
Col.3 - Area Salinized by irrigation (ha)
Col.4 - Total Drained Area (ha)
A US Geological Survey Report of 8/1/05 "Estimated Withdrawals from Principal Aquifers in the US, 2000" provides details of ground-water withdrawals from principal aquifers in each state. It breaks the withdrawal data into major uses - irrigation, public water supplies, and self-supplied industrial uses. On a daily basis, 76.5 billion gallons are used for these three purposes, with irrigation accounting for nearly 75% of this amount. The full report is available online at http://pubs.water.usgs.gov/circ1279. It is 52 pages long and the pdf file is 12.8 MB in size.
See http://iwmi.org.pk/iwmi/WP%2064%20final-With%20C%20&%20B%20Page.pdf for the results of a comprehensive groundwater survey of Pakistan, designed to understand the dynamics of groundwater use, operation and maintenance patterns, socio-economics of groundwater irrigation, land use pattern, crops, yields, and groundwater irrigation practices. 1/11/05
See the World Bank's Irrigation and Drainage website:
http://lnweb18.worldbank.org/ESSD/ardext.nsf/26ByDocName/IrrigationandDrainage
See http://www.fao.org/landandwater/aglw/index.stm for a major information resource on water supply issues.
For a huge amount of water-supply and water-use data see http://www.fao.org/ag/agl/aglw/aquastat/countries/index.stm that gives you a drop-down list that you can choose individual countries from. (Some country files are in Spanish and French.)
WORLD RESOURCES 2005
CONTENTS:
Visit http://population.wri.org/worldresources2005-pub-4073.html
http://population.wri.org/pubs_pdf.cfm?PubID=4073 permits you to download a .pdf file of the entire document (264 pages, 15 MB) (See E:\sustainability\wrr05_full.pdf)
NOTE: The page numbers given below are those you ask the .pdf software to take you to.
The actual page numbers printed on the document's pages are significantly different.
WORLD RESOURCES 2005 Data Tables (Introduction to tables) (p.148-149).
Tables - Population and Education (p.153-156)
~ ~ ~ Total Population Estimates and Projections (1980, 2005, 2030)
~ ~ ~ Estimated Total Fertility Rates (2000-2005)
~ ~ ~ (For more information visit http://earthtrends.wri.org/datatables/population)
Tables - Gender and Development (p.161-164)
~ ~ ~ Annual Earned Income (International dollars) (1991-2000) (Women and Men)
~ ~ ~ (For more information visit jttp://earthtrends.wri.org/datatables/population)
Tables - Income and Poverty (p.165-168)
~ ~ ~ GDP per Capita PPP (International $) (2002)
~ ~ ~ For more information visit http://earthtrends.wri.org/datatables/Economics
Tables - Economics and Financial Flows (p.169-172)
~ ~ ~ GDP (Constant 1995 US$)
~ ~ ~ Distribution of GDP by Sector (%) (Agriculture, Industry, Services) in 2002)
~ ~ ~ Workers' Remittances as a % of GNI (2002)
~ ~ ~ For more information visit http://earthtrends.wri.org/datatables/Economics
Tables - Energy (p.177-178)
~ ~ ~ Energy Consumption - Total from all Sources (1000 metric toe) (1991 and 2001)
~ ~ ~ Energy Consumption (% in 2001) (Fossil, Solid Biomass, Nuclear, Hydro, Other renewables)
~ ~ ~ Electricity Consumption per capita (KWH) (2001)
~ ~ ~ Percent of Population with Access to Electricity (2000)
~ ~ ~ Proven Fossil Fuel Reserves (million metric toe) (2003) (Coal, Oil, Natural gas)
~ ~ ~ For more information visit http://earthtrends.wri.org/datatables/energy
Tables - Water Resources and Fisheries (p.185-188)
~ ~ ~ Actual Renewable Water Resources (Total: km3) (Per Capita in m3/person)
~ ~ ~ Annual Water Withdrawals (Total in km3) (Per-Capita (m3/ person in 2000)
~ ~ ~ Annual Water Withdrawals by Sector in 2000 (Agriculture, Industry, Domestic)
~ ~ ~ Inland/ Marine Fisheries Production (in 1000 metric tonnes) (Capture) (Aquaculture)
~ ~ ~ Trade in Fish and Fisheries Products (million US$) (2000-2002) (Imports) (Exports)
~ ~ ~ For more information visit http://earthtrends.wri.org/datatables/freshwater
Tables - Land Use and Human Settlement (p.193-196)
~ ~ ~ Total land area (2002)
~ ~ ~ Land Area Classifications - Forested (MODIS Satellite Imagery in 2000 - more than 50% cover,
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ and more than 10%)
~ ~ ~ Land Area Classifications - Forested (FAO Estimate more than 10% cover in 1990 and 2000)
~ ~ ~ Land Area Classifications - Agriculture - Arable and Permanent croplands (1992, 2002)
~ ~ ~ Land Area Classifications - Agriculture - Permanent Pasture (1992 & 2002)
~ ~ ~ Land Area Classifications - drylands.
~ ~ ~ Population Density (People per km2 in 2000)
~ ~ ~ Percent of Urban People living in slum conditions in 2001.
~ ~ ~ For more information visit http://earthtrends.wri.org/datatables/forests
Tables - Food and Agriculture (p.197-200)
~ ~ ~ Agricultural Land Area (2002)
~ ~ ~ Irrigated Cropland as a Percent of Total Land (2002)
~ ~ ~ Labor Inputs to Agriculture (workers/ ha) (2001)
~ ~ ~ Fertilizer Applied (kg/ ha) (2001)
~ ~ ~ Water Withdrawals (m3/ ha) (2000)
~ ~ ~ Cereals Received as Food Aid (1000 tonnes) (2002)
~ ~ ~ Net Cereal Imports as a % of Consumption (2002)
~ ~ ~ Share of Calorie Supply from Animal Products (2002)
~ ~ ~ For more information visit http://earthtrends.wri.org/datatables/agriculture
More data tables are available on line at Earthtrends http://earthtrends.wri.org
(If you don't want graphics, just data, see the same information at http://earthtrends.wri.org/text.)
(A CD-ROM (also hardcopy) of Earthtrends data is also available. Visit http://www.wristore.com)
Chapter 1 - Reference Citations on p. 204-207.
Chapter 2 - Reference Citations on p. 208-209.
Chapter 3 - Reference Citations on p. 210-212.
Chapter 4 - Reference Citations on p. 213-215.
Chapter 5 - Reference Citations on p. 216-???.
The Index (by subject) on pages 220-228.
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