India
History of water filters - Past, present and future of water filtration technology
Posted on 11 Jul, 2010 02:16 PMThe History of Water Filters website, has interesting and useful information on water filters, water treatment alternatives and water quality.
Providing a plan to save civilization - Books from the Earth Policy Institute
Posted on 11 Jul, 2010 05:24 AMEarth Policy Institute, is a non-profit environmental research organization dedicated to providing a vision of an eco-economy and a roadmap on how to get there. The Institute was founded in 2001 with the following goals:
- to provide a global plan (Plan B) for moving the world onto an environmentally and economically sustainable path
- to provide examples demonstrating how the plan would work, and
- to keep the media, policymakers, academics, environmentalists, and other decision-makers focused on the process of building a Plan B economy.
The basic research of the Institute has been published in the form of seven books:
Development of instrument for automation of irrigation scheduling and groundwater recharge monitoring using soil moisture measurement – A research report by National Institute of Hydrology
Posted on 10 Jul, 2010 06:35 PMThe report presents development of a sensor system capable of automated measurement of soil-water status, using the four-electrode resistivity (VES) method, in a soil profile. In this method, by changing the separation between two electrodes (metallic rods) placed at the ground surface without digging any holes, the variation in moisture content in the sub-surface soil profile can be monitored.
Software for a hydrological data year book – A report by National Institute of Hydrology
Posted on 10 Jul, 2010 10:39 AMThe report deals with software developed by the National Institute of Hydrology with the purpose of preparation of hydrological data book in a form most valuable to the users. A menu driven, user friendly software has been developed to handle all types of hydrological and meteorological data.
Draft regulatory framework for wetlands conservation - Comments by ATREE
Posted on 09 Jul, 2010 11:49 PMThe Ministry of Environment and Forests released a draft of the regulatory framework for wetland conservation - Wetlands Conservation and Management Rules (2009) for feedback from all stakeholders. The draft framework was prepared by a multi-disciplinary expert group, and final round of comments were invited till June 21st 2010.
The Wetland Conservation Team of Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment (ATREE) did a detailed analysis of the draft regulation and submitted several pertinent concerns to the Ministry. The most significant observation is that the new framework (as do much of India's policies and laws) continues to propose unjustifiable State control and interventions over the country's wetlands and livelihoods of people dependent on them. The regulation does not make any constructive suggestions or recommendations for the conservation that the country's wetlands demand, and instead brings all wetlands into complete official control by installing Central, State and District-level wetland regulatory authorities, wherein the majority of the members will be senior government officials.
Systematic procedure for the computation of evaporation from lakes - A research report by National Institute of Hydrology
Posted on 08 Jul, 2010 10:49 PMThe report presents a systematic procedure for the computation of evaporation from lakes. Water balance of a lake depends upon the relative importance of various inputs and outputs to and from the lake. In Indian conditions, evaporation loss constitutes one of the major outputs from a lake and as such, the water regime of a lake and yield are influenced by it. In order to conserve and use the water, there is an urgent need for a first hand reasonable accurate estimate of its water balance.
Effect of non hydrostatic pressure distribution on dam break flood wave movement – A Research Report by National Institute of Hydrology
Posted on 08 Jul, 2010 09:46 PMThe report presents the effect of non hydrostatic pressure distribution on dam break flood wave movement. Dam break flood moves with non-hydrostatic pressure distribution in the vertical direction. However, almost all the mathematical models for dam break flows use Saint-Venant equation, which presume hydrostatic pressure in the vertical direction. In this report, an attempt has been made to use Boussinesq equations in the mathematical model.
Indian floods leave 50 people dead, almost half a million displaced - Nita Bhalla
Posted on 08 Jul, 2010 04:15 PMArticle Courtesy : Reuters AlertNet
Written by: Nita Bhalla
NEW DELHI (AlertNet) - Floods triggered by heavy monsoon rains have killed more than 50 people and displaced almost half a million more in India's south and northeast, say government officials.
Overflowing rivers and reservoirs have inundated low-lying villages mainly in India's oil and tea-rich state of Assam, but also on the opposite side of country in the southwestern coastal state of Kerala.
Flood-affected people sit in a damaged hut
as they wait for relief supplies in Lakhimpur
district, in India's northeastern state of Assam.
FILE PHOTO, July 2009. REUTERS/Stringer
According to the ministry of home affairs, almost one million people have been hit by the floods, forcing almost half a million to leave their water-logged villages and seek shelter in government relief camps.
Mountainous Assam, where five people have drowned, has been the worst-affected with 13 out of 27 districts hit by flooding, including Kokrajhar, Lakhimpur, Baksa and Bongaigaon.
e-Disha July newsletter from Consortium for DEWATS Dissemination Society
Posted on 08 Jul, 2010 10:05 AMArticle and Image Courtesy: Consortium for DEWATS Dessemination Society
The July edition of e-Disha published by the Consortium of DEWATS Dissemination Society (CDD) has the following highlights:
Sensitivity analysis of hydrological parameters on flood hydrograph – A research report by National Institute of Hydrology
Posted on 07 Jul, 2010 11:06 PMIn this study, Clark’s model has been used for derivation of one-hour unit hydrograph for a catchment. The design flood estimate has been obtained using the calibrated parameters of the Clark model together with the time-area diagram corresponding to a 48-hour design storm, which has been temporally distributed and critically sequenced as a single bell, giving due consideration to the ordinates of the unit hydrograph.