Community exposure and vulnerability to water quality and availability: a case study in the mining-affected Pazña Municipality, Lake Poopó Basin, Bolivian Altiplano

被引:0
|
作者
Megan French
Natalie Alem
Stephen J. Edwards
Efraín Blanco Coariti
Helga Cauthin
Karen A. Hudson-Edwards
Karen Luyckx
Jorge Quintanilla
Oscar Sánchez Miranda
机构
[1] University College London,Institute for Risk and Disaster Reduction
[2] Centro de Comunicación y Desarrollo Andino,UCL Hazard Centre, Department of Earth Sciences
[3] University College London,Instituto de Investigaciones Químicas
[4] Andean Risk & Resilience Institute for Sustainability & the Environment,Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences
[5] Universidad Mayor San Andrés,undefined
[6] Birkbeck,undefined
[7] University of London,undefined
[8] Catholic Agency for Overseas Development,undefined
[9] Feedback,undefined
来源
Environmental Management | 2017年 / 60卷
关键词
Water resources management; Water quality; Water scarcity; Vulnerability; Bolivian Altiplano; Mining;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Assessing water sources for drinking and irrigation along with community vulnerability, especially in developing and rural regions, is important for reducing risk posed by poor water quality and limited water availability and accessibility. We present a case study of rural mining-agricultural communities in the Lake Poopó Basin, one of the poorest regions on the Bolivian Altiplano. Here, relatively low rainfall, high evaporation, salinization and unregulated mining activity have contributed to environmental degradation and water issues, which is a situation facing many Altiplano communities. Social data from 72 households and chemical water quality data from 27 surface water and groundwater sites obtained between August 2013 and July 2014 were used to develop locally relevant vulnerability assessment methodologies and ratings with respect to water availability and quality, and Chemical Water Quality Hazard Ratings to assess water quality status. Levels of natural and mining-related contamination in many waters (CWQHR ≥ 6; 78% of assessed sites) mean that effective remediation would be challenging and require substantial investment. Although waters of fair to good chemical quality (CWQHR ≤ 5; 22% of assessed sites) do exist, treatment may still be required depending on use, and access issues remain problematic. There is a need to comply with water quality legislation, improve and maintain basic water supply and storage infrastructure, build and operate water and wastewater treatment plants, and adequately and safely contain and treat mine waste. This study serves as a framework that could be used elsewhere for assessing and mitigating water contamination and availability affecting vulnerable populations.
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页码:555 / 573
页数:18
相关论文
共 3 条
  • [1] Community exposure and vulnerability to water quality and availability: a case study in the mining-affected Paza Municipality, Lake Poop Basin, Bolivian Altiplano
    French, Megan
    Alem, Natalie
    Edwards, Stephen J.
    Blanco Coariti, Efrain
    Cauthin, Helga
    Hudson-Edwards, Karen A.
    Luyckx, Karen
    Quintanilla, Jorge
    Sanchez Miranda, Oscar
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2017, 60 (04) : 555 - 573
  • [2] Community Perception of Water Quality in a Mining-Affected Area: A Case Study for the Certej Catchment in the Apuseni Mountains in Romania
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    [J]. Environmental Management, 2009, 43 : 1131 - 1145
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    Zobrist, Juerg
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    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2009, 43 (06) : 1131 - 1145