30 - Impacts on freshwater resources
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Fresh water represents only 3% of the total volume of water on earth. Distribution of this fresh water: rivers / rivers / lakes (1%), basements (24%) and ice (75%).
2Causas
The great water cycle feeds, among other things, rivers and groundwater. A disrupted water cycle distributed differently geographically has impacts on the availability of fresh water in certain regions.
Fresh water resources depend partly on rainfall. Less rain can therefore lead to less fresh water resources in certain regions.
2Consecuencias
3Otras causas posibles
Via the melting of glaciers (otherwise it is largely via the modification of the rain regime)
If we consider that this map also includes glaciers, then there is indeed an impact on fresh water resources: the glaciers of the Hindu Kush and the Himalayas provide drinking water to 250 million people spread across 8 country of the world. By 2100, more than 2/3 of them could have melted, which will cause floods and then shortages of fresh water: the large rivers such as the Huang Hue (Yellow River), the Yangtze, the Brahmaputra, 'Indus and the Ganges will no longer carry much water in summer, which supply Bangladesh, Pakistan and northern India.
If we consider that this map also includes glaciers, then there is indeed an impact on fresh water resources: the glaciers of the Hindu Kush and the Himalayas provide drinking water to 250 million people spread across 8 country of the world. By 2100, more than 2/3 of them could have melted, which will cause floods and then shortages of fresh water: the large rivers such as the Huang Hue (Yellow River), the Yangtze, the Brahmaputra, 'Indus and the Ganges will no longer carry much water in summer, which supply Bangladesh, Pakistan and northern India.