Litcius/Paper detail

Capping Human Water Footprints in the World's River Basins

Rick J. Hogeboom, Davey de Bruin, Joep F. Schyns, Maarten S. Krol, Arjen Y. Hoekstra

2020Earth s Future74 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Increased water demand and overexploitation of limited freshwater resources lead to water scarcity, economic downturn, and conflicts over water in many places around the world. A sensible policy measure to bridle humanity's water footprint, then, is to set local and time-specific water footprint caps, to ensure that water appropriation for human uses remains within ecological boundaries. This study estimates-for all river basins in the world-monthly blue water flows that can be allocated to human uses, while explicitly earmarking water for nature. Addressing some implications of temporal variability, we quantify trade-offs between potentially violating environmental flow requirements versus underutilizing available flow-a trade-off that is particularly pronounced in basins with a high seasonal and interannual variability. We discuss several limitations and challenges that need to be overcome if setting water footprint caps is to become a practically applicable policy instrument, including the need (for policy makers) to reach agreement on which specific capping procedure to follow. We conclude by relating local and time-specific water footprint caps to the planetary boundary for freshwater use.

Topics & Concepts

Water useWater scarcityOverexploitationEnvironmental sciencePlanetary boundariesWater resource managementWater resourcesFootprintEnvironmental resource managementNatural resource economicsSustainabilityGeographyEcologyEconomicsArchaeologyBiologyWater resources management and optimizationWater-Energy-Food Nexus StudiesHydrology and Watershed Management Studies