A green-gray path to global water security and sustainable infrastructure

Sustainable development demands reliable water resources, yet traditional water management has broadly failed to avoid environmental degradation and contain infrastructure costs. We explore the global-scale feasibility of combining natural capital with engineering-based (green-gray) approaches to me...

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Autores principales: Vorosmarty, C.J., Stewart-Koster, B., Green, P. A., Boone, E. L., Florke, M., Fischer, Gundula, Wiberg, David A., Bunn, S. E., Bhaduri, A., McIntyre, P. B., Sadoff, C., Liu, H., Stifel, David
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/115163
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author Vorosmarty, C.J.
Stewart-Koster, B.
Green, P. A.
Boone, E. L.
Florke, M.
Fischer, Gundula
Wiberg, David A.
Bunn, S. E.
Bhaduri, A.
McIntyre, P. B.
Sadoff, C.
Liu, H.
Stifel, David
author_browse Bhaduri, A.
Boone, E. L.
Bunn, S. E.
Fischer, Gundula
Florke, M.
Green, P. A.
Liu, H.
McIntyre, P. B.
Sadoff, C.
Stewart-Koster, B.
Stifel, David
Vorosmarty, C.J.
Wiberg, David A.
author_facet Vorosmarty, C.J.
Stewart-Koster, B.
Green, P. A.
Boone, E. L.
Florke, M.
Fischer, Gundula
Wiberg, David A.
Bunn, S. E.
Bhaduri, A.
McIntyre, P. B.
Sadoff, C.
Liu, H.
Stifel, David
author_sort Vorosmarty, C.J.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Sustainable development demands reliable water resources, yet traditional water management has broadly failed to avoid environmental degradation and contain infrastructure costs. We explore the global-scale feasibility of combining natural capital with engineering-based (green-gray) approaches to meet water security threats over the 21st century. Threats to water resource systems are projected to rise throughout this period, together with a significant expansion in engineering deployments and progressive loss of natural capital. In many parts of the world, strong path dependencies are projected to arise from the legacy of prior environmental degradation that constrains future water management to a heavy reliance on engineering-based approaches. Elsewhere, retaining existing stocks of natural capital creates opportunities to employ blended green-gray water infrastructure. By 2050, annual engineering expenditures are projected to triple to $2.3 trillion, invested mainly in developing economies. In contrast, preserving natural capital for threat suppression represents a potential $3.0 trillion in avoided replacement costs by mid-century. Society pays a premium whenever these nature-based assets are lost, as the engineering costs necessary to achieve an equivalent level of threat management are, on average, twice as expensive. Countries projected to rapidly expand their engineering investments while losing natural capital will be most constrained in realizing green-gray water management. The situation is expected to be most restrictive across the developing world, where the economic, technical, and governance capacities to overcome such challenges remain limited. Our results demonstrate that policies that support blended green-gray approaches offer a pathway to future global water security but will require a strategic commitment to preserving natural capital. Absent such stewardship, the costs of water resource infrastructure and services will likely rise substantially and frustrate efforts to attain universal and sustainable water security.
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spelling CGSpace1151632024-06-26T10:18:04Z A green-gray path to global water security and sustainable infrastructure Vorosmarty, C.J. Stewart-Koster, B. Green, P. A. Boone, E. L. Florke, M. Fischer, Gundula Wiberg, David A. Bunn, S. E. Bhaduri, A. McIntyre, P. B. Sadoff, C. Liu, H. Stifel, David water security water resources water management infrastructure natural capital ecosystem services sustainable development goals environmental degradation forecasting investment frameworks economic aspects ecology Sustainable development demands reliable water resources, yet traditional water management has broadly failed to avoid environmental degradation and contain infrastructure costs. We explore the global-scale feasibility of combining natural capital with engineering-based (green-gray) approaches to meet water security threats over the 21st century. Threats to water resource systems are projected to rise throughout this period, together with a significant expansion in engineering deployments and progressive loss of natural capital. In many parts of the world, strong path dependencies are projected to arise from the legacy of prior environmental degradation that constrains future water management to a heavy reliance on engineering-based approaches. Elsewhere, retaining existing stocks of natural capital creates opportunities to employ blended green-gray water infrastructure. By 2050, annual engineering expenditures are projected to triple to $2.3 trillion, invested mainly in developing economies. In contrast, preserving natural capital for threat suppression represents a potential $3.0 trillion in avoided replacement costs by mid-century. Society pays a premium whenever these nature-based assets are lost, as the engineering costs necessary to achieve an equivalent level of threat management are, on average, twice as expensive. Countries projected to rapidly expand their engineering investments while losing natural capital will be most constrained in realizing green-gray water management. The situation is expected to be most restrictive across the developing world, where the economic, technical, and governance capacities to overcome such challenges remain limited. Our results demonstrate that policies that support blended green-gray approaches offer a pathway to future global water security but will require a strategic commitment to preserving natural capital. Absent such stewardship, the costs of water resource infrastructure and services will likely rise substantially and frustrate efforts to attain universal and sustainable water security. 2021-09 2021-09-26T12:49:28Z 2021-09-26T12:49:28Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/115163 en Open Access Elsevier Vorosmarty, C. J.; Stewart-Koster, B.; Green, P. A.; Boone, E. L.; Florke, M.; Fischer, G.; Wiberg, David A.; Bunn, S. E.; Bhaduri, A.; McIntyre, P. B.; Sadoff, C.; Liu, H.; Stifel, David. 2021. A green-gray path to global water security and sustainable infrastructure. Global Environmental Change, 70:102344. [doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2021.102344]
spellingShingle water security
water resources
water management
infrastructure
natural capital
ecosystem services
sustainable development goals
environmental degradation
forecasting
investment
frameworks
economic aspects
ecology
Vorosmarty, C.J.
Stewart-Koster, B.
Green, P. A.
Boone, E. L.
Florke, M.
Fischer, Gundula
Wiberg, David A.
Bunn, S. E.
Bhaduri, A.
McIntyre, P. B.
Sadoff, C.
Liu, H.
Stifel, David
A green-gray path to global water security and sustainable infrastructure
title A green-gray path to global water security and sustainable infrastructure
title_full A green-gray path to global water security and sustainable infrastructure
title_fullStr A green-gray path to global water security and sustainable infrastructure
title_full_unstemmed A green-gray path to global water security and sustainable infrastructure
title_short A green-gray path to global water security and sustainable infrastructure
title_sort green gray path to global water security and sustainable infrastructure
topic water security
water resources
water management
infrastructure
natural capital
ecosystem services
sustainable development goals
environmental degradation
forecasting
investment
frameworks
economic aspects
ecology
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/115163
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