• Media type: E-Book
  • Title: Mongolia : Groundwater Assessment of the Southern Gobi Region
  • Corporation: World Bank
  • imprint: Washington, DC, 2010
  • Extent: 1 Online-Ressource
  • Language: Not determined
  • Keywords: ACCEPTABLE QUALITY ; ACCESS TO WATER ; ADEQUATE WATER ; AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT ; AGRICULTURAL WATER ; AGRICULTURAL WATER USE ; ANIMAL FEED ; ANNUAL PRECIPITATION ; ANNUAL RAINFALL ; AQUATIC LIFE ; AQUIFER ; AQUIFERS ; ARID REGIONS ; AVAILABILITY OF WATER ; AVAILABLE WATER ; AVAILABLE WATER RESOURCES ; BOREHOLES ; BROAD RANGE ; CALCIUM ; CANALS ; CAPACITY BUILDING ; CHLORIDE ; CLAY ; CLIMATE CHANGE ; [...]
  • Origination:
  • Footnote: East Asia and Pacific
    Mongolia
    English
    en_US
  • Description: The report looks critically at the water resources and the current and projected future water demands in the Southern Gobi Region (SGR) using the widely dispersed data and information that are currently available. An important conclusion of the report is that almost all the significant sources of groundwater in the SGR are 'fossil' or 'non-renewable', meaning that they are finite resources which cannot be replenished. Not only will that, but pumping water out of these fosil aquifers tend to cause a drop in the groundwater levels above them. The report proposes practical steps by which water resources development and management could be managed to best serve economic and infrastructure development while giving attention to environmental protection and service to communities in the SGR. The report also highlights the urgent need for more data. A more detailed picture of the distribution and quantity of the groundwater would give planners first, a better idea of both the limits to the growth of the SGR; and, second, of the future water demands, its spatial distribution, quality requirements, and the possibilities to increase water use efficiency and water re-use. Thus there is a need to bring all information and data together to form the basis for rational planning
  • Access State: Open Access