Rainwater could save people in India a bucket of money, according to a new study by scientists looking at NASA satellite data.
The
study, partially funded by NASA’s Precipitation Measurement Missions,
found that collecting rainwater for vegetable irrigation could reduce
water bills, increase caloric intake and even provide a second source of
income for people in India.
The study, published in the June
issue of Urban Water Journal, is based on precipitation data from the
Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM), a joint mission between NASA
and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, which provided observations
of rainfall over the tropics and subtropics from 1997 to 2015.
"India
has severe problems getting potable water to all of its residents,"
said Dan Stout, research assistant in the Department of Civil
Engineering at the University of Utah and one of three authors of the
study. "We considered collecting water in a relatively small tank, and
it’s amazing the effect that doing something that small and simple can
have on the Indian people."
Rainwater harvesting is not a new
concept, but the team said it is currently a largely untapped resource
in India. Other researchers have studied rainwater harvesting as a
potential solution for the country’s water problems, but they mostly
focused on its use to replenish groundwater levels, which does not
provide any direct benefit for immediate water supply. The water must
run off into the ground before being pumped again for use aboveground.
Here,
the team examined the possibilities if Indians collected precipitation
in cheap 200-gallon tanks that they could easily engineer to fit in
densely populated urban areas, such as many of India’s growing cities.
The team analyzed satellite data of precipitation in different areas to
evaluate the availability of rainwater for direct harvesting—information
that would have been nearly impossible to obtain if not for TRMM.
"I
spent a decent amount of time trying to find precipitation data in
India," Stout said. "For the most part, it didn’t exist or was kept
under lock and key, aside from annual accrued averages across large
regions of the country. That was not at all sufficient. Before I found
TRMM’s data, I was thinking we would have to drop the project."
TRMM
precipitation estimates show the variation in rainfall at 3.1-mile
resolution, even in areas where ground measurements are non-existent.
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