International Archives of Photogrammetrv and Remote Sensing. Vol XXXII Part 7C2, UNISPACE III, Vienna 1999
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I5PR5
UNISPACE III - ISPRS Workshop on
“Resource Mapp ing from Space ”
9:00 am -12:00 pm, 22 July 1999, VIC Room B
Vienna, Austria
I5PRS
MONITORING WATER RESOURCES AND AGRO-ECOSYSTEM PRODUCTIVITY FROM SPACE
Wim G.M. Bastiaanssen*/**
* International Institute for Aerospace Survey and Earth Sciences (ITC), P.O. Box 6, 7500AA, Enschede, The Netherlands, Associate
Professor in Water Management Analysis
** International Water Management Institute (IWMI), P.O. Box 2075, Colombo, Sri Lanka. Consultant
ISPRS Commission: Technical Forum, Working Group: Resource Mapping from Space
KEY WORDS: Global water scarcity, water resources management, biomass growth, earth observations
ABSTRACT
There is a considerable shortage of water for drinking, sanitation and, most importantly, for growing crops in developing countries.
This water crisis will expedite in the next century and will affect the living and growing conditions in densely populated river basins.
The baseline question goes back to whether we have sufficient quantities of water to maintain living standards. Unfortunately we
have to conclude that there are no proper clues on the utilization of water resources in river basins and on where water leaves the
hydrological system through evaporation into the atmosphere. Hence, water managers can hardly present reliable figures on the water
balance and the users of water, and there is a need to exploit new information technologies to help them. Operational low resolution
satellites fly over river basins on a daily basis (e.g. NOAA-AVHRR), and provide the opportunity to monitor the status of land and
water resources, providing that the sky is free of clouds. Low resolution satellites with a short revisit period are attractive to
concurrently monitor large scale evaporation and vegetation growth processes in developing countries, if the data is provided free by
the supplier and proper interpretation algorithms with a physical basis are applied. Some examples from Pakistan are presented.
1. INTRODUCTION
The renewed interest for water conservation and the
productivity of resources directly follows the increasing water
scarcity at the global scale. The world’s population has recently
passed 6 billion and the finite amount of water resources has to
be shared with more people in the next millennium. By 2025,
more than a quarter of the world’s population or a third of the
population in developing countries will live in regions that will
experience severe water scarcity (Seckler et al., 1999). Food
projections for 2040 reveal the need for a two to three-fold
increase in food productivity, as compared to 1990 (Penning de
Vries et al., 1995). Although the hydrological research
community has endeavoured to solve issues in climate
hydrology (e.g. Hutjes et al., 1998) and water balances of
tropical forests (e.g. Shuttleworth, 1988), there is a need to
investigate water resources management in developing countries
where millions of people do not have access to sanitation and
irrigation water.
Information on regional water inflow through precipitation,
snow melt and groundwater movement and outflow through
evaporation from rainfed agriculture, irrigated agriculture,
forests and natural vegetation, is often incomplete or inadequate
for comprehensive water availability analysis (Burton et al.,
1999; Bastiaanssen, 1999). Proper water management at the
river basin scale requires accurate information on the spatial
distribution of rainfall, water storage and distribution through
irrigation canals, and the vegetation growth resulting from that.
Currently, a few number of meteorological stations, cross
regulators and piezometers are used for hydrological analyses at
the regional scale. Because conventional networks are
characterized by insufficient spatial and temporal coverage of
the Earth’s surface, earth observation data from space platforms
is becoming increasingly important to supplement existing
hydrological data networks at the ground (Rango and Shalabv.
1998).
The average annual per capita domestic water needs are 20,000
liter, but Gambia and Haiti have 2,000 liter/capita to consiune
domestically while Australia lias 606,000 liter/capita. One
hectare of wheat evaporates 5,000,000 liter to form grains and
wetlands under tropical condition may sometimes need
15.000,000 liter/ha/yr to remain environmentally wet and
maintain a healthy vegetation and bio-diversity. Hence, sowing
one hectare of wheat gives 250 persons less to drink and bath,
but it is unavoidable to feed the people. The difficulties in
choosing between water allocations are most acutely
experienced in river basin systems, where most citizens
commonly live and work. Knowledge of the land and water use
patterns in the rural areas is of prime importance for natural
resources managers because it swallows the bulk of the water
resources. The irrigation sector withdraws an estimated 70 to 90
percent of freshwater resources in developing countries (World
Bank, 1992; FAO. 1994). Although the public perception is that
the irrigation sector wastes fresh water resources, this opinion is
not necessarily correct. Vast volumes of canal water that
initially missed the crop can be recaptured by pumping
groundwater from shallow aquifers, downstream capillar)' rise
to the root zone, and return flow into tributaries or the main
river itself. Recycling of water resources considerably increases
the overall productivity of water. New innovations involve the