Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 20 segundos...
Inicio  /  Water  /  Vol: 8 Par: 4 (2016)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Assessing Marginalized Communities in Mexico for Implementation of Rainwater Catchment Systems

Gerardo Sámano-Romero    
Marina Mautner    
Alma Chávez-Mejía and Blanca Jiménez-Cisneros    

Resumen

Mexico contains a high percentage of marginalized communities, as well as geographic areas with high annual precipitation (approximately 2000 mm). This study uses regional water access and precipitation data to determine municipalities that would most benefit from the installation of Domestic Rain Water Harvesting Systems (DRWHS). The main objective was to find a relationship between local conditions (marginalization, expected level of service, and precipitation) and the physical components of DRWHS. First, monthly precipitation and the number of inhabitants per household were determined for each municipality. Catchment area and tank size were then calculated for a single dwelling by municipality using water demand, run-off coefficient, monthly precipitation, and number of inhabitants per household. In general, municipalities with very low access to municipal water and very high precipitation were found in the southern area of the country. A curve that estimates catchment area based on annual precipitation was developed using the selected municipalities, which produced an average catchment area of 113.3 m2 for a water demand of 100 L/capita/day. While any DRWHS must be designed specific to local conditions, this study has determined that a regional approximation can be used to select ideal communities for these systems, which can in turn facilitate national implementation.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Miguel Ángel López Zavala, Ricardo Castillo Vega, Rebeca Andrea López Miranda     Pág. 1 - 18
Northeastern Mexico is a semiarid region with water scarcity and a strong pressure on water sources caused by the rapid increase of population and industrialization. In this region, rainwater harvesting alone is not enough to meet water supply demands du... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Liliana Lizárraga-Mendiola, Gabriela Vázquez-Rodríguez, Alberto Blanco-Piñón, Yamile Rangel-Martínez and María González-Sandoval    
In cities with problems of aridity and a shortage of drinking water supply, there is an urgent need to establish alternatives for an adequate water management program. This study proposes an estimation through which users can select a rainwater harvestin... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Tiemen A. Nanninga, Iemke Bisschops, Eduardo López, José Luis Martínez-Ruiz, Daniel Murillo, Laura Essl and Markus Starkl    
Often centralized water supply, sanitation and solid waste services struggle to keep up with the rapid expansion of urban areas. The peri-urban areas are at the forefront of this expansion and it is here where decentralized technologies are increasingly ... ver más
Revista: Water

 
E. RAMÍREZ LARA,R. MIRANDA GUARDIOLA,Y. GRACIA VÁSQUEZ,I. BALDERAS RENTERÍA,H. BRAVO ÁLVAREZ,R. SOSA ECHEVERRÍA,P. SÁNCHEZ ÁLVAREZ,A. ALARCÓN JIMÉNEZ,M.C. TORRES,J. KAHL    
The present study reports the chemical composition of atmospheric wet deposition in Monterrey, capital of the state of Nuevo León and the most important industrial city in northeastern México, where air quality presents a serious problem due to dust p... ver más
Revista: Atmósfera

 
H. PADILLA,M. C. TORRES,R. BELMONT,R. GARCÍA,A. BÁEZ    
Total peroxides were analyzed in 26 rainwater samples collected on board of the R/V El Puma of the National Autonomous University of México (UNAM) during the Climatic Experiment in the Americas Warm Water Pools (ECAC-1) over the... ver más
Revista: Atmósfera