Resources in Hot Arid Environments (SL IB Geography)

Revision Note

Jacque Cartwright

Last updated

Opportunities in Hot Arid Environments

  • Hot arid environments provide a range of opportunities for development, including:
    • Energy 
      • Solar energy in areas such as the Mojave, Desert
      • Wind, including the Tarfaya complex in the Sahara Desert
      • Coal mining, such as the Thar coalfield
    • Mineral extraction
      • Reserves of a range of minerals include copper, uranium, and coal in the USA Western Desert, phosphorus and gypsum in the Thar Desert
    • Tourism 
      • Desert safaris in the Kalahari Desert
      • Horseback riding in the Namib Desert
      • Staying in a traditional Ger (Mongolian Yurt) in the Gobi Desert
      • Balloon flights such as those over the Namib Desert
    • Agriculture
      • Irrigation enables large scale agriculture in areas such as the Arabian Desert and Gobi Desert
      • Subsistence farming occurs in many desert environments

Challenges in Hot Arid Environments

  • The harsh, hot, and arid environment pose a range of challenges for any development
  • Water availability
    • The lack of readily available water increases costs and can deter people from moving to areas for work
    • However, as the population increases, the demand for water also increases, but not all aquifers are usable
      • Some aquifers are hyper-saline (they are many times saltier than seawater)
      • Some become polluted by mining processes, such as the use of arsenic in gold extraction
    • Many arid regions have deep-level aquifers and where pit mining occurs, water flows into the pit from the aquifer
      • The Pilbara region of Australia lies on a water-bearing aquifer that is just 100 to 250 metres below surface
      • Many commercial mining operations in the region start below the water table and have to pump the water out of the pit daily
      • Water is pumped to a holding tank and then used to process the 'ores' or sprayed on roads to dampen dust
  • Extreme temperatures: which can reach 50 °
    • This leads to high levels of evaporation and water shortages
    • It makes working very difficult and tiring
  • Mineral extraction
    • The abundant stores of natural resources can lead to political tensions over contested land or borders
      • Western Sahara has rich phosphate reserves, but there has been a long-running territorial dispute between Morocco and its indigenous Sahrawi people 
    • Abandoned pits can flood, creating artificial lakes, although if polluted or hyper-saline, they have no economic or recreational value
    • Open-cut mining creates unstable slopes and are environmentally damaging as it exposes previously-covered toxic or dangerous materials
      • Uranium is open-mined in the Sahel Desert (in Niger), where the rock is crushed before being dumped for chemical leaching 
      • There are enough harmful substances and radon emissions in the mining tailings to damage the local ecosystem for many generations
    • Underground mines can collapse and cause land subsidence
  • Accessibility
    • There is a lack of roads due to low population
    • Pipelines, roads and railways need to be built to withstand the high temperatures
    • Sand often covers the roads
    • Most of the desert areas are inaccessible and are only accessed by flying into the region

Case Study: Thar Desert

Development opportunities in the Thar Desert

location-of-thar-desert

Location of the Thar Desert

Opportunities

  • Subsistence farming
    • In depressions between the sand dunes, any precipitation collects; grasses grow and animals can graze
    • Goats provide milk and meat for the communities
  • Commercial farming
    • The construction of the Indira Gandhi canal allows irrigation
    • This enables crops such as wheat and cotton to be grown for sale on a commercial scale
  • Tourism 
    • Tourists are attracted to seeing the different species found in the deserts on desert safaris 
    • The desert is a hub for migrating birds, which many tourists visit to see
    • There has been an increase in ecotourism 
  • Mineral Extraction
    • The extraction of gypsum, limestone, feldspar, kaolin and phosphorus all takes place within the Thar Desert
  • Energy 
    • The Jaisalmer Wind Park is the world's fourth-largest wind farm
    • Coal extraction: It is estimated there are reserves of 175 billion tonnes of coal
    • Oil and gas: Large reserves of oil and gas have been found under the Thar Desert
    • The Bhadia Solar Park covers more than 22 square miles and is one of the world's largest

Challenges

  • Extreme temperatures
    • In the hottest months of May and June, temperatures often reach 50 °C.
    • Working in the high temperatures for miners, farmers, etc... is extremely challenging
  • Water supply
    • Precipitation in the Thar desert is very low (120–240 mm)
    • Evaporation rates are high
    • Natural ponds: called tobas, provide people with water in remote areas
    • In some areas, over-irrigation has led to salinisation when the water evaporates, leaving the salt behind
    • The 650-kilometre Indira Gandhi Canal provides water for drinking and irrigation
  • Inaccessibility
    • The Thar Desert is over 230,000 km2
    • The road network across the vast area is limited
    • On the roads that do exist, tarmac may melt due to the high temperatures
    • Roads quickly become covered in sand
    • City of Jaisalmer has become a honeypot tourist site because access to other areas is so expensive and difficult

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Jacque Cartwright

Author: Jacque Cartwright

Expertise: Geography Content Creator

Jacque graduated from the Open University with a BSc in Environmental Science and Geography before doing her PGCE with the University of St David’s, Swansea. Teaching is her passion and has taught across a wide range of specifications – GCSE/IGCSE and IB but particularly loves teaching the A-level Geography. For the last 5 years Jacque has been teaching online for international schools, and she knows what is needed to pass those pesky geography exams.