How Inter-Basin Transfer of Water Alters Basin Water Stress Used for Water Footprint Characterization

Author:

Yano Shinjiro,Okazumi Toshio,Iwasaki Yoshihisa,Yamaguchi Masahiro,Nakamura Kenichi,Kanayama Takuhiro,Ogawada Daikichi,Matsumura Akiko,Gomez-Garcia Martin,Oki Taikan

Abstract

Water footprint assessments contribute to a better understanding of potential environmental impacts related to water and have become essential in water management. The methodologies for characterizing such assessments, however, usually fail to reflect temporal and spatial variations at local scales. In this paper, we employ four widely-used characterization factors, which were originally developed with global estimates of water demand and availability, to evaluate the impact that inter-basin transfer (IBT) of water has on water risk assessments and, consequently, on the evaluation of the soundness of water cycle. The study was conducted for two major river basins in Japan, where diversion channels were built to move water from the Tone river basin to the Arakawa river basin. Considering IBT, the available water in the Arakawa river basin increases a 45%, reducing the characterization factors a 44% on average and denoting their tendency to overestimate the risk in this basin, while the Tone river basin increased the characterization factors a 28% on average by IBT. Moreover, with a simple example we show how ambiguity in the definition of some characterization factors may cause significant changes in the result of the assessments. Finally, we concluded that local water footprint characterization can be more helpful in local assessment of water resources if the results are unanimous, Targetable, Replicable, Ameliorable, Comparable, and Engageable (uTRACE).

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Environmental Science,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference38 articles.

1. Sustainable Development Goalshttps://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/

2. Sustainable Development Goal 6https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/sdg6

3. Human Appropriation of Renewable Fresh Water

4. Global Hydrological Cycles and World Water Resources

5. WWAP (United Nations World Water Assessment Programme)/UN-Water the United Nations World Water Development Report 2018: Nature-Based Solutions for Water,2018

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