DEVELOPMENT REPORT - Storing Drinking Water(在线收听

DEVELOPMENT REPORT

January 7, 2002: Storing Drinking Water

By Gary Garriott


This is the VOA Special English Development Report.

Safe drinking water has always been rare and valuable. Throughout the world, drinking water has to be stored for
periods of low rainfall. Tanks or other containers for water storage must be ready long before a dry season
begins.

For hundreds of years different kinds of materials have been used to build water storage containers. In many
areas of the world, small lakes or reservoirs formed by dirt walls provide drinking water for villagers during the
long dry season. In western Sudan, the thick part of the baobob tree is removed to store water collected during the
short rainy season in that country.

Bricks and concrete are among the modern materials used today to build storage containers for water. A solid
rock can be used as the bottom of a water tank. However, a mixture of rock and soil should not be used. The soil
will settle down, but the rock will not. The water will leak out.

Ferro-cement structures are popular in some developing countries, especially in India. Ferro -cement is made by
pouring a sand and cement mixture over a skeleton form made of steel rods, pipe, or chicken wire. It creates a
structure that is lightweight yet keeps in water. The walls of ferro-cement structures are usually thin, which
means that they can be used in building different shapes such as circles.

Wood also can be used for water storage structures. Cypress, fir, pine and redwood are some of the kinds of trees
that have been used. Wooden tanks do not require special care, although their average lifetime is shorter than
tanks made with concrete or steel. Any chemicals used to keep the wood from being ruined must not be
poisonous substances.

Water in uncovered storage tanks or reservoirs can become unsafe. Small green plants called algae can grow in
large amounts near the surface. The algae may help bacteria continue to grow, even if chemicals such as chlorine
are added to the water to kill the bacteria. Uncovered water also can be polluted by birds, animals or humans.

You can learn more about storing water for drinking through the Volunteers in Technical Assistance, or VITA.
You can reach VITA through the Internet at its World Wide Web address w-w-w dot v-i-t-a dot o-r-g.

This VOA Special English Development Report was written by Gary Garriott.


Email this article to a friend
Printer Friendly Version

  原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voa/2/Agriculture/7154.html