sustainable water management in the southwestern united states reality or rhetoric可持续水资源管理在美国西南部现实或言论.pdf
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Sustainable Water Management in the Southwestern
United States: Reality or Rhetoric?
Robert M. Marshall*, Marcos D. Robles, Daniel R. Majka, Jeanmarie A. Haney
The Nature Conservancy Center for Science and Public Policy, Tucson, Arizona, United States of America
Abstract
Background: While freshwater sustainability is generally defined as the provisioning of water for both people and the
environment, in practice it is largely focused only on supplying water to furnish human population growth. Symptomatic of
this is the state of Arizona, where rapid growth outside of the metropolitan Phoenix-Tucson corridor relies on the same
groundwater that supplies year-round flow in rivers. Using Arizona as a case study, we present the first study in the
southwestern United States that evaluates the potential impact of future population growth and water demand on
streamflow depletion across multiple watersheds.
Methodology/Principal Findings: We modeled population growth and water demand through 2050 and used four
scenarios to explore the potential effects of alternative growth and water management strategies on river flows. Under the
base population projection, we found that rivers in seven of the 18 study watersheds could be dewatered due to municipal
demand. Implementing alternative growth and water management strategies, however, could prevent four of these rivers
from being dewatered.
Conclusions/Significance: The window of opportunity to implement water management strategies is narrowing. Because
impacts from groundwater extraction are cumulative and cannot be immediately reversed, proactive water management
strategies should be implemented where groundwater will be used to support new municipal demand. Our approach
provides a low-cost method to identify where alternat
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