Water on an urban planet: Urbanization and the reach of urban water infrastructure
Urban growth drives rising freshwater demand, yet global city water sources were never assessed—until now. Our study reveals infrastructure’s role in reducing stress, but 1 in 4 cities remain vulnerable, impacting $4.8T in economic activity and highlighting the need for strategic water management.
Subject Tags
- Conservation Planning
Abstract
Urban growth is increasing the demand for freshwater resources, yet surprisingly the water sources of the world's large cities have never been globally assessed, hampering efforts to assess the distribution and causes of urban water stress. We conducted the first global survey of the large cities’ water sources, and show that previous global hydrologic models that ignored urban water infrastructure significantly overestimated urban water stress. Large cities obtain 78 ± 3% of their water from surface sources, some of which are far away: cumulatively, large cities moved 504 billion liters a day (184 km3 yr−1) a distance of 27,000 ± 3800 km, and the upstream contributing area of urban water sources is 41% of the global land surface. Despite this infrastructure, one in four cities, containing $4.8 ± 0.7 trillion in economic activity, remain water stressed due to geographical and financial limitations. The strategic management of these cities’ water sources is therefore important for the future of the global economy.
Citation
McDonald, R.I., Weber, K., Padowski, J., Flörke, M., Schneider, C., Green, P.A., Gleeson, T., Eckman, S., Lehner, B., Balk, D. and Boucher, T., 2014. Water on an urban planet: Urbanization and the reach of urban water infrastructure. Global environmental change, 27, pp.96-105.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959378014000880
Media Contacts
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Robert McDonald
Lead Scientist for Nature-based Solutions Europe
The Nature Conservancy
Email: rob_mcdonald@tnc.org