Maui's freshwater : status, allocation, and management for sustainability

The water system on Maui Island in Hawaii is an integral part of the island’s infrastructure, affecting energy, agriculture, waste, and domestic systems. Both the built and the natural water systems are likely to be altered over the coming decades. Maui’s two major industries are agriculture and tou...

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Main Author: Grubert, Emily
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2010-08-1835
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-ETD-UT-2010-08-18352015-09-20T16:56:26ZMaui's freshwater : status, allocation, and management for sustainabilityGrubert, EmilyMauiFreshwaterResource planningHawaiiWater resource managementThe water system on Maui Island in Hawaii is an integral part of the island’s infrastructure, affecting energy, agriculture, waste, and domestic systems. Both the built and the natural water systems are likely to be altered over the coming decades. Maui’s two major industries are agriculture and tourism, which compete for water and land resources. Maui faces high costs for food and fuel it must import, and agricultural efforts might shift from plantation-scale monocropping to energy production or diversified agriculture for food. Simultaneously, land use changes (like deforestation), climate change, and cyclical droughts affect Maui’s freshwater supply. Water planning and management based on careful assessment can be valuable tools for a community expecting that water will become increasingly scarce. Since water plays a large role in many other systems, choices about water allocation and use can help the island move toward solutions of multiple problems at once, including energy scarcity, coastal protection, and financial health. This work provides a dynamic snapshot of Maui’s current built and natural water systems, then analyzes two potential water management actions: pumped storage hydroelectric facilities built on existing reservoirs and use of secondary treated wastewater to irrigate biomass for power. Based on cost estimates and alternative solutions, neither of these applications are currently judged viable.text2010-12-21T20:34:07Z2010-12-21T20:34:15Z2010-12-21T20:34:07Z2010-12-21T20:34:15Z2010-082010-12-21August 20102010-12-21T20:34:15Zthesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2010-08-1835eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Maui
Freshwater
Resource planning
Hawaii
Water resource management
spellingShingle Maui
Freshwater
Resource planning
Hawaii
Water resource management
Grubert, Emily
Maui's freshwater : status, allocation, and management for sustainability
description The water system on Maui Island in Hawaii is an integral part of the island’s infrastructure, affecting energy, agriculture, waste, and domestic systems. Both the built and the natural water systems are likely to be altered over the coming decades. Maui’s two major industries are agriculture and tourism, which compete for water and land resources. Maui faces high costs for food and fuel it must import, and agricultural efforts might shift from plantation-scale monocropping to energy production or diversified agriculture for food. Simultaneously, land use changes (like deforestation), climate change, and cyclical droughts affect Maui’s freshwater supply. Water planning and management based on careful assessment can be valuable tools for a community expecting that water will become increasingly scarce. Since water plays a large role in many other systems, choices about water allocation and use can help the island move toward solutions of multiple problems at once, including energy scarcity, coastal protection, and financial health. This work provides a dynamic snapshot of Maui’s current built and natural water systems, then analyzes two potential water management actions: pumped storage hydroelectric facilities built on existing reservoirs and use of secondary treated wastewater to irrigate biomass for power. Based on cost estimates and alternative solutions, neither of these applications are currently judged viable. === text
author Grubert, Emily
author_facet Grubert, Emily
author_sort Grubert, Emily
title Maui's freshwater : status, allocation, and management for sustainability
title_short Maui's freshwater : status, allocation, and management for sustainability
title_full Maui's freshwater : status, allocation, and management for sustainability
title_fullStr Maui's freshwater : status, allocation, and management for sustainability
title_full_unstemmed Maui's freshwater : status, allocation, and management for sustainability
title_sort maui's freshwater : status, allocation, and management for sustainability
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2010-08-1835
work_keys_str_mv AT grubertemily mauisfreshwaterstatusallocationandmanagementforsustainability
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