urban drought resilience-proposed research

27
Research to understand resilience of cities to drought: three hypotheses Lawrence Alan Baker Ecological Engineering Group Dept. Bioproducts and Biosystems Engineering University of Minnesota USA Presented at the European Society for Ecological Economics, June 14, 2011

description

This is a presentation that I made on research to understand urban drought reslience

Transcript of urban drought resilience-proposed research

Page 1: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Research to understand resilience of cities to drought:

three hypotheses Lawrence Alan Baker

Ecological Engineering Group Dept. Bioproducts and Biosystems Engineering

University of Minnesota USA

Presented at the European Society for Ecological Economics, June 14, 2011

Page 2: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Goals

•  The problem of urban drought •  Drought as a socio-ecological (SE)

phenomenon •  Resilience to SE drought •  Several research hypotheses

Page 3: urban drought resilience-proposed research

20

30

40

50

60

70

1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 2030

% o

f po

pula

tion

Year

Urban

Rural

An urbanizing world: nearly 5 billion urban dwellers by 2030

Page 4: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Unorganized area in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso

Page 5: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Global drought impacts, 1970-2007 Source: Kallis (2008)

Africa Asia South & central America

North. America

Europe

Disasters 222 226 87 12 36

Millions affected

310 1,493 61 0.03 14

Cost, million U.S. $

6 30 9 6500 20

Deaths 672,647 5,381 0 2 60

Page 6: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Projected Drought Pattern (Dai, 2011)

Page 7: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Drinking water

Bathing & laundry

Flush toilet

Washing machine

Water for production

2nd flush toilet

Turf irrigation

Liters per capita/day

3

250

50

1000 Swimming pool

100

Maslow’s Triangle for Water Use

Page 8: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Drought as a Socio-Ecological Phenomenon

Meterological drought – defined as deficit of rainfall over some period of time

Hydrological drought – defined on the basis of water supply (including groundwater and reservoir storage, relative to demand

Socio-ecological (SE) drought – defined based on the impact of depleted water availability on the social, economic, and ecological environment of human ecosystems.

Overarching hypothesis: The long-term impact of drought depends on the socio-ecological resilience of cities.

Page 9: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Period of Drought

Time

Impa

ct

Robust & resilient

Not robust, but resilient

Robust but not resilient

Neither robust nor resilient

Before Drought

After Drought

Resilience and Robustness in Response to Drought

Page 10: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Factors affecting drought resilience

•  Antecedent environmental conditions

•  Physical infrastructure

•  Water governance

Page 11: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Antecedent environmental conditions 1. Urban groundwater depletion

Not just in arid lands

Chicago

Map of groundwater isopleths in Chicago, Illinois, North-central U.S.

Annual average T = 10 oC Annual average P = 86 cm

Groundwater depletion = 260 m

Page 12: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Antecedent environmental conditions: 2. Groundwater contamination

Causes: 1.  Urbanization of agricultural land 2.  Leaky sewers 3.  Septic systems and latrines (esp.

Africa) 4.  Animal waste 5.  Landfills

Source: Wakida and Lerner (2005)

Nitrate concentrations in Phoenix, Arizona (USA)

Page 13: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Smoldering landfill in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso

Page 14: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Physical infrastructure for resilience: the water infrastructure: Phoenix, Arizona (USA)

Imported water from Colorado River

Multiple reservoirs on two rivers

Large groundwater basin

Phoenix

Page 15: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Importation of Colorado River water via the Central Arizona-Phoenix Project

Total cost: $4 billion Capacity: 2.5 109 m3 per year

Page 16: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Agricultural buffer

Page 17: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Water governance

1. Levels of water governance 2. Water law (quantity) 3. Capacity to provide feedback 4. Capacity to respond

Page 18: urban drought resilience-proposed research

International river basins: 263 worldwide

Page 19: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Water governance example: Arizona’s “Active Management Areas”

•  Includes the entire urban region (about 7 cities + agricultural belt) •  Focus on groundwater management •  Solid legal mandate

Page 20: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Informal governance

Page 21: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Water law: Who gets to use the water?

Characteristics:

•  Rarely embedded in national constitutions (South Africa, Kenya) •  Generally fragmented among levels of governance •  Often based on common law, formed over time by judicial decisions •  Rules of groundwater and surface water are usually different •  Generally does not recognize economic value •  International legal framework weak •  Treaties are highly variable

Page 22: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Projected per capita water shortages in the Phoenix region driven by “first in right” appropriation (Source: Bolin et al., 2010. Local Environ. 15: 261–279)

Page 23: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Feedback for drought resilience

1. Ability to acquire hydrologic information – status of groundwater, stream monitoring, water deliveries, etc.

2. Transparency – data available

3. Accessibility of information for appropriate levels of governance

- “3-click rule”, no specialized software, appropriate technical level

Page 24: urban drought resilience-proposed research

ASU’s Decision Theater

Feedback: - transparent - accessible - timely

Page 25: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Capacity to respond:

1. Redundant water supplies (inter-basin transfers, surface + groundwater supplies, rainwater harvesting, etc.)

2. Intact water delivery system – low leakage losses

3. Agricultural buffer – system to acquire agricultural water during severe droughts

4. Water reuse infrastructure (irrigation)

5. Equitable water quantity law

6. Ability to enforce water conservation

Page 26: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Research Agenda General hypothesis: We can predict resilience of a city to drought of given severity based on antecedent physical conditions, the extent of environmental feedback, and the capacity to adapt.

Value: Practical- Ability to increase resilience (reduce vulnerability) to droughts. Theoretical – opportunity to develop transdisciplinary theory of human ecosystems

Highly interdisciplinary – engineering, hydrology, political science, sociology, geography

Site-based – one or more major cities on several continents

Duration: 5-10 years

Page 27: urban drought resilience-proposed research

Hydrologists

Economists

Environmental engineers

Planners

Lawyers

Sociologists

The City

Interdisciplinary approach