9th
International Rainwater Catchment Systems Conference
"Rainwater
Catchment: An Answer to the Water Scarcity of the Next Millennium."
Petrolina, Brazil - July 1999
Section 3: Rainwater Catchment and Droughts
Paper 3.7
Rainfall Harvesting for Indigenous Health in Australia
Carol Conway, Charles Nicholson, Gabriele
Bammer, Alan Wade & Graham Henderson
Australian Institute of Aboriginal
E-mail: carol@elc.aiatsis.gov.au
Abstract
Australia is a dry country, particularly in the inland
areas. The poor quantity and quality of water available to many Indigenous
Australians living in rural and remote locations contributes to their poor
health status relative to other Australians. Rainfall harvesting from the roofs
of houses and buildings in Indigenous communities can provide a valuable source
of potable water, but this harvesting is often inefficient. We report a study
of two remote and diverse locations in areas where Indigenous Australians have
water supply problems. The first is Giles in central Australia (25.040S,
128.290E) with a median annual rainfall of 119mm, and the second is
Thursday Island in the Torres Strait (10.350S, 142.220E)
with a median annual rainfall of 1718mm. We describe a means of correlating
rainfall records with collecting roof areas, water storage capacity, house
occupancy rates, and water consumption rates using a computer program. We
determine the optimum match between these factors and the total collectable
rainfall for the best, worst, and median years based on historical rainfall
records for each location. This quantitative approach to rainfall harvesting
could significantly improve the security of potable water supplies for many
Indigenous communities in Australia, and thus contribute towards an improvement
in Indigenous health.
PDF of full document available
to members (8pp, 66kb)
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