4.6 Article

Water for Tomorrow: A Living Lab on the Creation of the Science-Policy-Stakeholder Interface

Journal

WATER
Volume 14, Issue 18, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w14182879

Keywords

water resources management; systems innovation approach; policy recommendations; River Basin Management Plans; sustainability

Funding

  1. ERC Grant Smart Water Futures [951424]
  2. European Research Council (ERC) [951424] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Proactive sustainable water management is a timely and important issue for vulnerable agricultural areas in South Europe. The driest rural region of Thessaly in Greece has faced various environmental, planning, economic, and administrative issues, as well as conflicts. A 19-month project called Water For Tomorrow brought together key stakeholders, including scientists and policymakers, to establish a common understanding of the problems, learn from past failures, and develop policy recommendations in the context of sustainability. The implications of this work are significant for integrated water resources management in similar south-European cases.
The proactive sustainable management of scarce water across vulnerable agricultural areas of South Europe is a timely issue of major importance, especially under the recent challenges affecting complex water systems. The Basin District of Thessaly, Greece's driest rural region, has a long history of multiple issues of an environmental, planning, economic or administrative nature, as well as a history of conflict. For the first time, the region's key-stakeholders, including scientists and policymakers, participated in tactical meetings during the 19-month project Water For Tomorrow. The goal was to establish a common and holistic understanding of the problems, assess the lessons learned from the failures of the past and co-develop a list of policy recommendations, placing them in the broader context of sustainability. These refer to enhanced and transparent information, data, accountability, cooperation/communication among authorities and stakeholders, capacity building, new technologies and modernization of current practices, reasonable demand and supply management, flexible renewable energy portfolios and circular approaches, among others. This work has significant implications for the integrated water resources management of similar south-European cases, including the Third-Cycle of the River Basin Management Plans and the International Sustainability Agendas.

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