Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10503838 Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability 2013 8 Pages PDF
Abstract
We review the conceptual and quantitative foundation of the recently suggested 'planetary boundary' for freshwater (PB-Water; i.e. tolerable human 'blue' water consumption), and propose ways forward to refine and reassess it. As a key element of such a revision we suggest a bottom-up quantification of local water availabilities taking account of environmental flow requirements. An analysis that respects these requirements in a spatially explicit manner suggests a PB-Water of ∼2800 km3 yr−1 (the average of an uncertainty range of 1100-4500 km3 yr−1). This is notably lower than the earlier suggestion based on a simpler top-down analysis (4000 km3 yr−1, the lower value of a range of 4000-6000 km3 yr−1). The new estimate remains provisional, pending further refinement by in-depth analyses of local water accessibility and constraints up-scaled to the global domain, including study of cascading impacts on Earth system properties. With a current blue water consumption of >1700 km3 yr−1, PB-Water is being approached rapidly. Thus, design opportunities to remain within PB-Water are imperative. We argue that their quantification requires analysis of tradeoffs with other planetary boundaries such as those for land use and climate change.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth and Planetary Sciences (General)
Authors
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