Litcius/Paper detail

Multilayer Network Clarifies Prevailing Water Consumption Telecouplings in the United States

Susana García, Michael Gomez, Richard Rushforth, Benjamin L. Ruddell, Alfonso Mejía

2021Water Resources Research21 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Virtual water flows are used to map the indirect water consumption connections implied by the supply chain of a city, region, or country. This information can be used to manage supply chains to achieve environmental policy objectives and mitigate environmental risks to critical supply chains. A limitation of prior work is that these flows are typically analyzed using monolayer networks, which ignores crucial intersectoral or interlayer couplings. Here, we use a multilayer network to account for such couplings when analyzing blue virtual water flows in the United States. Our multilayer network consists of 115 different regions (nodes), covering the entire conterminous United States; 41 coupled economic sectors (layers); and ∼2 × 10 7 possible links. To analyze the multilayer network, we focus on three fundamental network properties: topological connectivity, mesoscale structure, and node centrality. The network has a high connectivity, with each node being on average connected to roughly 2/3 of the network's nodes. Interlayer flows are a major driver of connectivity, representing ∼54% of all the network's connections. Five different groups of tightly connected nodes (communities) characterize the network. Each community represents a preferred spatial mode of long‐range virtual water interaction within the United States. We find that large (populous) cities have a stronger influence than small ones on network functioning because they attract and recirculate more virtual water through their supply chains. Our results also highlight differences between the multilayer and monolayer virtual water network, which overall show that the former provides a more realistic representation of virtual water flows.

Topics & Concepts

Virtual waterCentralityNode (physics)Computer scienceWater supplyConsumption (sociology)Environmental scienceComputer networkDistributed computingTopology (electrical circuits)Water resourcesEnvironmental engineeringWater scarcityPhysicsEngineeringMathematicsCombinatoricsSocial scienceEcologySociologyElectrical engineeringQuantum mechanicsBiologyComplex Network Analysis TechniquesWater-Energy-Food Nexus StudiesSustainability and Ecological Systems Analysis