Adaptation to Future Water Shortages in the U.S. Caused by Population Growth and Climate Change
Published on by Water Network Research, Official research team of The Water Network in Government
Adaptation to Future Water Shortages in the United States Caused by Population Growth and Climate Change
Authors : Thomas C. Brown, Vinod Mahat, Jorge A. Ramirez
Abstract :
Population growth and climate change will combine to pose substantial challenges for water management in the United States. Projections of water supply and demand over the 21st century show that in the absence of further adaptation efforts, serious water shortages are likely in some regions. Continued improvements in water use efficiency are likely but will be insufficient to avoid future shortages. Some adaptation measures that have been effective in the past, most importantly large additions to reservoir storage, have little promise. Other major adaptations commonly used in the past, especially instream flow removals and groundwater mining, can substantially lower shortages but have serious external costs. If those costs are to be avoided, transfers from irrigated agriculture probably will be needed and could be substantial.
Published in Earth's Future, Volume 7, Issue 3, arch 2019,
DOI : 10.1029/2018EF001091
Source: AGU Pubs
Read the story about this paper on The Water Network:
Climate Change and Population Growth are Setting the Stage for Water Shortages
Taxonomy
- Water Scarcity
- Resource Management
- Water Scarcity In Desert area
- Climate Change
- Sustainable Water Resource Management
- Natural Resource Management
- Climate Change Adaptation
- Climate Change Resilience
- Urban Resource Management
- Water Resource Management