Monday, February 20, 2012

Low rainfall prompts UK drought summit

AFP: Low rainfall in recent months means large areas of Britain face drought this year, according to the government, which is staging a "drought summit" on Monday to decide what action to take. "The south east of England is at a high risk of drought due to continued low rainfall and central, eastern and south eastern England are unlikely to see a full recovery from drought conditions during 2012," says Environment Agency chairman Lord Chris Smith.

In the Anglian region the five months from September to January were the driest ever, the agency says. "Pressure on water resources looks set to increase over the next few months, so it is more important than ever that consumers, businesses and water abstractors use water wisely," said national drought coordinator Helen Vale.

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, the host for Monday's summit, says water resources need to be managed effectively, given increasing pressure on water supply as a result of population increase, changing household usage patterns and climate change. "Despite our reputation as a rainy country, we may face a future with less rainfall and less certainty about when that rain will fall," it says.

Organisations to be represented at the summit include water companies, the Environment Agency, Natural England, British Waterways and the Met Office. Government statistics show that each person in Britain uses on average 150 litres of water daily, with the average household using over 100,000 litres of water every year....

Water Tower Water tower near to Woolverstone Suffolk. Shot by Keith Evans, Wikimedia Commons via Geograph UK, under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license

No comments: