How Cities Can Manage Drought Risk and Conserve Water

“A recent Nations report on drought says cli­mate change is increas­ing the fre­quen­cy, sever­i­ty and dura­tion of droughts, which con­tribute to inse­cu­ri­ty, pover­ty and inequal­i­ty,” writes Chris Mal­loy. Addi­tion­al­ly, the report points out, “drought has been the sin­gle longest-term phys­i­cal trig­ger of polit­i­cal change in 5,000 years of record­ed human his­to­ry.”

This, says Mal­loy, “calls for urgent action and a trans­for­ma­tion in gov­er­nance to man­age mod­ern drought risk more effec­tive­ly.” And although “[e]very place is dif­fer­ent when it comes to prepar­ing for chal­lenges … some tac­tics are uni­ver­sal­ly applic­a­ble enough that they can be unit­ed into a blue­print for the water-smart cities of tomor­row.” These tac­tics include recy­cling water, mea­sur­ing usage–“if you can­not mea­sure it, you can­not man­age it”–and get­ting with tech­niques for col­lect­ing, stor­ing, and con­serv­ing water, such as desali­na­tion, reclaimed waste­water, and futur­is­tic options like Peru’s fog-catch­ing machines.

“There are also a host of pol­i­cy changes, includ­ing requir­ing build­ings to reuse water, encour­ag­ing grey­wa­ter sys­tems, and pur­su­ing inno­v­a­tive financ­ing, like the Stormwa­ter Infra­struc­ture Fee that Tuc­son charges ,” which “ rain­wa­ter cap­ture sys­tems and the devel­op­ment of green spaces.” But while “[c]ities can employ a range of solu­tions to tack­le water scarci­ty … cli­mate change remains the root cause of many loom­ing water .” To tack­le it, “cities will to become far more water effi­cient and invest in relat­ed edu­ca­tion.”

Read More

Leave a Comment