Visualising, Illustrating and Communicating Future Water Visions to Support Learning and Sustainability Transitions

Author:

Ward Sarah1ORCID,Forrow Dave2,Kirk Stuart3,Worthington Roger4,Paling Nick5,Stacey Freya1,Brunt Oakley1

Affiliation:

1. Westcountry Rivers Trust, Kyl Cober Parc, Stoke Climsland, Callington PL17 8PH, UK

2. Chief Scientists Group, Environment Agency, Red Kite House, Wallingford OX10 8BD, UK

3. Independent Researcher, Kenilworth CV8, UK

4. Plan Vision, Sidmouth EX10 9ES, UK

5. South West Water, Peninsula House, Rydon Lane, Exeter EX2 7HR, UK

Abstract

A global existential and interlocking environmental, climate and cooperation/equity polycrisis is being faced, which increasingly impacts and is impacted by water and land systems. As a result, transformations in response are gaining increasing traction. Advances in approaches to visualising and communicating how innovations and changes in landscape features enable shifts, transformations and transitions are more crucial than ever before. Visions help focus the actions, collaboration and alignment of multiple actors in working towards a common purpose, whilst also entering people’s consciousness at the deep level of values, transforming beliefs and consequently, thinking and action. They give direction to effort and pull on transformational innovation. The evidence-based ‘Water Visions Visualisation Platform’ presents an innovative and accessible way to illustrate, communicate and support future water visioning and strategising at the landscape scale based on composite paradigms, scenarios, horizons and concepts. Plausible visions of the future are envisioned, illustrated, narratively described and qualitatively assessed, as well as connected with real-world examples and resources through the interactive platform. This paper outlines the co-creation methodology, the architecture and the initial co-development of the platform, as well as a preliminary evaluation of its efficacy through literature-based criteria and the sharing of the platform with stakeholders.

Funder

The Environment Agency England

Interreg 2 Seas Programme PROWATER project

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Water Science and Technology,Aquatic Science,Geography, Planning and Development,Biochemistry

Reference69 articles.

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2. Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD) (2015, January 15–17). Governance challenges and suggested tools for the implementation of the water-related Sustainable Development Goals. Proceedings of the 2015 UN-Water Annual International Zaragoza Conference, Zaragoza, Spain. Available online: https://www.un.org/waterforlifedecade/waterandsustainabledevelopment2015/pdf/Governance_OECD_Tool_paper_final.pdf.

3. World Economic Forum (2023). The Global Risks Report 2023, World Economic Forum. [18th ed.]. Available online: https://www3.weforum.org/docs/WEF_Global_Risks_Report_2023.pdf.

4. Delivering sustainable urban water management: A review of the hurdles we face;Brown;Water Sci. Technol.,2009

5. Transitions towards adaptive management of water facing climate and global change;Water Resour. Manag.,2007

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