International Review for Environmental Strategies (IRES)

Results 21 - 30 of 164 (Sorted by date)
Peer-reviewed Article
In IRES Vol.6 No.2
Author:
Setiawan Wangsaatmaja
Arief D. Sutadian
Maria A. N. Prasetiati
As a rapidly developing metropolitan region, the Bandung Basin is experiencing growing problems with environmental degradation, one of which concerns groundwater, where there is an imbalance between discharge (withdrawal by utilities, households, and industry) and recharge in the basin's water catchment areas. One of the main causes is the ongoing...
Peer-reviewed Article
In IRES Vol.6 No.2
Author:
Chikafusa Sato
Michiko Haga
Jiro Nishino
A huge volume of groundwater was being pumped out for factories and to serve a growing population when ground subsidence was first detected in Tokyo in the years after 1910. Over the ensuing decades the water table dropped, falling to as low as 58 meters below sea level in 1965. The volume pumped out continued to grow until 1970, when it peaked at...
Peer-reviewed Article
In IRES Vol.6 No.2
Author:
Xu He
Liu Xiaoqin
Zhang Lei
Jin Guoping
Economic growth has produced great benefits for China, but it has also given rise to mounting environmental problems that threaten the country's sustainable development. Managing groundwater resources effectively is crucial because of the integral role of water in daily life, the economy, and the environment. The situation of water scarcity in...
Peer-reviewed Article
In IRES Vol.6 No.2
Author:
Mukand S. Babel
Ashim Das Gupta
Niña Donna Sto. Domingo
The various negative impacts on the environment and society caused by land subsidence have been a problem in Bangkok, Thailand, since the 1970s. Intensive groundwater extraction for industrial and domestic purposes since the 1950s, which led to a decline of groundwater levels, has been identified by various studies as the primary cause of the...
Peer-reviewed Article
In IRES Vol.6 No.2
Author:
N. P. Dan
B. X. Thanh
B. D. Truong
This paper focuses on issues of typical groundwater pollution caused by inadequate wastewater control systems in Vietnam, a common problem in many developing countries around the world. Two case studies are presented, one of industrial wastewater problems in the province of Tay Ninh, and the other of groundwater contamination by an unsanitary...
Research Report
IRES Vol.6 No.2
Groundwater, often described as “out of sight, out of mind”, is a crucial resource for mankind, yet not many people realise its crucial situation. This edition of IRES aims to highlight the importance of groundwater resource, particularly in Asia, and present new technologies and innovative solutions for groundwater management and policy. EDITORS'...
Peer-reviewed Article
In IRES Vol.6 No.2
Author:
M. Ashraf Ali
High arsenic concentrations in groundwater were first detected in western Bangladesh in the early 1990s. The arsenic is of natural origin and is believed to be mobilized in the subsurface by a number of mechanisms that are not yet clearly understood. Estimates of the population in Bangladesh now exposed to concentrations over the national drinking...
Peer-reviewed Article
In IRES Vol.6 No.2
This paper provides an overview of the common types of groundwater contamination observed in Asia, along with a discussion of the policy aspects of groundwater management. Groundwater is an essential part of the water cycle and plays an important role in domestic water supplies and economic activities. However, groundwater contamination, both...
Peer-reviewed Article
In IRES Vol.6 No.2
Author:
Davide Bixio
Chris Thoeye
Thomas Wintgens
Rita Hochstrat
Thomas Melin
Haim Chikurel
Avi Aharoni
Bruce Durham
In the last two decades, Europe has been increasingly confronted with growing water stress, both in terms of water scarcity and deterioration of quality. Growing water demand, supply costs, and competition for good-quality freshwater reserves prompted a call for more efficient use of water resources, including a more widespread acceptance of...
Peer-reviewed Article
In IRES Vol.6 No.2
Groundwater is at risk in many cities in Asia as a result of excessive abstraction. Without proper groundwater management, the precious resource will deteriorate further. In cities such as Bangkok (Thailand), Tianjin (China), and Bandung (Indonesia) groundwater problems such as dropping water tables and land subsidence have been observed, and...