Affiliation:
1. Public Administration and Policy Group Wageningen University and Research Wageningen The Netherlands
Abstract
AbstractGovernments are increasingly faced with climate change realities and have also committed themselves to international agreements with objectives to tackle long‐term problems such as becoming climate neutral by 2050. Governments, therefore, will need to carefully consider how to contribute to combatting climate change, when investing in their water infrastructure that is reaching an end‐of‐lifetime due to technical aging or changing functional requirements. Such investments offer crucial windows of opportunity to create more resilient water systems, because large budgets are involved and lifespans of infrastructure are long and co‐determine possible futures. Based on a literature review, this article develops key ways of how infrastructure operators could adopt a long‐term perspective and choose water management strategies that increase absorptive, adaptive, and transformative capacities. With these perspectives and strategies, this article sets out a basis to help governments prepare for the future when they invest in water infrastructure.This article is categorized under:
Human Water > Water Governance
Science of Water > Water and Environmental Change
Engineering Water > Planning Water
Funder
Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology,Aquatic Science,Ecology,Oceanography
Cited by
5 articles.
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