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Water storage in an era of climate change: addressing the challenge of increasing rainfall variability. Blue paper

TLDR
Water storage, in its various forms, provides a mechanism for dealing with variability which, if planned and managed correctly, increases water security, agricultural productivity and adaptive capacity as discussed by the authors. But, ill-conceived water storage is a waste of financial resources and, rather than mitigate, may aggravate unpleasant climate change impacts.
Abstract
Rainfall variability is a key constraint to agricultural production and economic growth in many developing countries. This is likely to be exacerbated in many places as rainfall variability is amplified (even where the total amount of rain increases) as a result of climate change. Changes in rainfall will also increase variability in groundwater recharge and river flow, thus affecting all water sources. Water storage, in its various forms, provides a mechanism for dealing with variability which, if planned and managed correctly, increases water security, agricultural productivity and adaptive capacity. As such, water storage can make an important contribution to safeguarding livelihoods and reducing rural poverty. However, ill-conceived water storage is a waste of financial resources and, rather than mitigate, may aggravate unpleasant climate change impacts. Systems that combine complementary storage options are likely to be more adaptable and acceptable than those based on a single storage type. More systematic planning and management is required to avoid the mistakes of the past and to ensure more effective and suitable storage systems for the future

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BookDOI

The United Nations World Water Development Report 2018: Nature-based Solutions for Water

Scientific
TL;DR: The 2018 edition of the World Water Development Report seeks to inform policy and decision makers, inside and outside the water community, about the potential of nature-based solutions (NBS) to address contemporary water management challenges across all sectors, and particularly regarding water for agriculture, sustainable cities, disaster risk reduction and water quality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Towards understanding the integrative approach of the water, energy and food nexus

TL;DR: Evaluation of the WEF nexus integrative debate can be carried out using four key criteria, namely ability to change current policy debates, issue and thinking novelty, practicability and measurability, and clearness and implementation roadmap.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reductionist and integrative research approaches to complex water security policy challenges

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review and contrast two approaches that water security researchers employ to advance understanding of the complexity of water-society policy challenges, and propose a more integrative approach to address a range of uncertainties, explicitly recognise diversity in society and the environment, incorporate water resources that are less-easily controlled, and consider adaptive approaches to move beyond conventional supply-side prescriptions.
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Journal ArticleDOI

Stationarity Is Dead: Whither Water Management?

TL;DR: Climate change undermines a basic assumption that historically has facilitated management of water supplies, demands, and risks and threatens to derail efforts to conserve and manage water resources.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reliability, resiliency, and vulnerability criteria for water resource system performance evaluation

TL;DR: In this paper, three criteria for evaluating the performance of water resource systems are discussed, i.e., reliability, resilience, and vulnerability, which describe how likely a system is to fail, how quickly it recovers from failure, and how severe the consequences of failure may be.
Journal ArticleDOI

Global Change and Human Vulnerability to Vector-Borne Diseases

TL;DR: Impacts on vector-borne diseases, including malaria, dengue fever, infections by other arboviruses, schistosomiasis, trypanosomosis, onchocerciasis, and leishmaniasis are reviewed.
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