4.7 Article

Human-Water Dynamics and their Role for Seasonal Water Scarcity - a Case Study

期刊

WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT
卷 35, 期 10, 页码 3043-3061

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11269-021-02819-1

关键词

Water; Resource management; Socio-hydrology; Systems thinking; System dynamics

资金

  1. SMHI - Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Ensuring sustainable management and sufficient supply of freshwater resources is becoming increasingly challenging globally. Studies show that current policies addressing water scarcity often fail to consider the impact of human-water interactions on water supply and demand. Solutions to combat water scarcity should focus on understanding these interactions and exploring information and economic policy instruments.
Ensuring sustainable management and an adequate supply of freshwater resources is a growing challenge around the world. Even in historically water abundant regions climate change together with population growth and economic development are processes that are expected to contribute to an increase in permanent and seasonal water scarcity in the coming decades. Previous studies have shown how policies to address water scarcity often fail to deliver lasting improvements because they do not account for how these processes influence, and are influenced by, human-water interactions shaping water supply and demand. Despite significant progress in recent years, place-specific understanding of the mechanisms behind human-water feedbacks remain limited, particularly in historically water abundant regions. To this end, we here present a Swedish case study where we, by use of a qualitative system dynamics approach, explore how human-water interactions have contributed to seasonal water scarcity at the local-to-regional scale. Our results suggest that the current approach to address water scarcity by inter-basin water transports contributes to increasing demand by creating a gap between the perceived and actual state of water resources among consumers. This has resulted in escalating water use and put the region in a state of systemic lock-in where demand-regulating policies are mitigated by increases in water use enabled by water transports. We discuss a combination of information and economic policy instruments to combat water scarcity, and we propose the use of quantitative simulation methods to further assess these strategies in future studies.

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