Abstract

Abstract The 2018 edition of the United Nations World Water Development Report stated that nearly 6 billion peoples will suffer from clean water scarcity by 2050. This is the result of increasing demand for water, reduction of water resources, and increasing pollution of water, driven by dramatic population and economic growth. It is suggested that this number may be an underestimation, and scarcity of clean water by 2050 may be worse as the effects of the three drivers of water scarcity, as well as of unequal growth, accessibility and needs, are underrated. While the report promotes the spontaneous adoption of nature-based-solutions within an unconstrained population and economic expansion, there is an urgent need to regulate demography and economy, while enforcing clear rules to limit pollution, preserve aquifers and save water, equally applying everywhere. The aim of this paper is to highlight the inter-linkage in between population and economic growth and water demand, resources and pollution, that ultimately drive water scarcity, and the relevance of these aspects in local, rather than global, perspective, with a view to stimulating debate.

Keywords

ScarcityWater scarcityNatural resource economicsWater resourcesPopulation growthPopulationBusinessEconomicsDevelopment economicsWater resource managementEnvironmental scienceMarket economyEcology

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Publication Info

Year
2019
Type
article
Volume
2
Issue
1
Citations
2268
Access
Closed

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Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

2268
OpenAlex
45
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Cite This

Alberto Boretti, Lorenzo Rosa (2019). Reassessing the projections of the World Water Development Report. npj Clean Water , 2 (1) . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41545-019-0039-9

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/s41545-019-0039-9

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%