body bg

Inform-Banner

Impact of dense reservoir networks on water resources in semiarid environments

  • Year: 2013
  • Author: JC de Araujo, PHA Medeiros
  • Journal Name: Australian Journal of Water Resources
  • Journal Number: Vol. 17 No. 1
  • Publisher: Engineers Australia
  • Published Location: Barton, A.C.T.
  • ISBN: 1324-1583
  • Country: Brazil

The northeast of Brazil is a semiarid region where water scarcity is a major problem dealt with by the construction of dams. This policy generated a dense reservoir network in the region, resulting in a complex system. The impacts of the network have been assessed, and the results showed that the existence of a large number of small dams upstream the strategic ones, impact both negatively and positively the overall water availability.

 

The negative effects of the network are mainly high evaporation losses from small reservoirs, and the fact that they add considerable complexity to the management of the system. On the other hand, the reservoirs generate a more democratic water distribution and higher energy rationality, as a consequence of the better spatial distribution of the water resources. In addition, sediment retention in the network leads to lower silting rate of strategic reservoirs, meaning lower temporal decay in water availability in the already water-scarce region.

Related Items

Re-creating the Rural, Reconstructing Nature: An International Literature Review of the Environmental Implications of Amenity Migration

The term 'amenity migration' describes a broad diversity of patterns of human movement to rural...

Mining law in New South Wales : a discussion paper

This paper has been drafted to encourage discussion about the legal framework for mining in NSW,...

The Economic Benefits of Native Shelter Belts Report 2/14

The protection of existing native vegetation and the planting of shelterbelts may provide a...

Share this with your friends

Footer Logo

Contact Us

Level 2, 53 Blackall Street
Barton ACT 2600
AUSTRALIA
Telephone: 02 6260 3733
or email us