WATER WORLD
The unintended consequences of dams and reservoirs
by Staff Writers
Uppsala, Sweden (SPX) Nov 15, 2018

file image

An international team of drought scientists show that while many dams and reservoirs are built, or expanded, to alleviate droughts and water shortages, they can paradoxically contribute to make them worse. The study is published in Nature Sustainability.

Building dams and reservoirs is one of the most common approaches to cope with drought and water shortage. The aim is straightforward: reservoirs can store water during wet periods, and then release it during dry periods. As such, they can stabilize water availability, thereby satisfying water demand and alleviating water shortage.

The research team behind the new study was led by professor Giuliano Di Baldassarre at Uppsala University. Their paper shows that increasing reservoir storage capacity can also lead to unintended effects in the long term, and, paradoxically, worsen water shortage.

The authors argue that there are two counterintuitive phenomena that should be considered when expanding or planning reservoirs: the supply-demand cycle and the reservoir effect.

The supply-demand cycle describes cases where increasing water supply leads to higher water demand, which can quickly offset the initial benefits of reservoirs. These cycles can be seen as a rebound effect, also known in environmental economics as Jevon's paradox: as more water is available, water consumption tends to increase.

This can result in a vicious cycle: a new water shortage can be addressed by further expansion of reservoir storage to increase (again) water availability, which enables more water consumption, until the next shortage... As such, the supply-demand cycle can trigger an accelerating spiral towards unsustainable exploitation of water resources and environmental degradation.

The reservoir effect describes cases where over-reliance on reservoirs increases the potential damage caused by drought and water shortage. The expansion of reservoirs often reduces incentives for preparedness and adaptive actions, thus increasing the negative impacts of water shortage.

Moreover, extended periods of abundant water supply, supported by reservoirs, can generate higher dependence on water resources, which in turn increases social vulnerability and economic damage when water shortage eventually occurs.

The new study also provides policy implications. The authors argue that attempts to increase water supply to cope with growing water demand, which is fueled by the increase in supply, is unsustainable. Hence, they suggest less reliance on large water infrastructure, such as dams and reservoirs, and more efforts in water conservation measures.

In other words, coping with drought and water shortage by reducing water consumption, rather than (fueling consumption by) increasing water supply. While many water experts would agree with this general recommendation, numerous dams and reservoirs are still being built or proposed in many places around the world.

Lastly, the authors posit that the notion that "we must increase water availability to satisfy a growing water demand" remains pervasive because there are major knowledge gaps in the study of the dynamics generated by the interplay of water, society and infrastructure. Thus, they propose an interdisciplinary research agenda to unravel the long-term effects (including the unintended consequences) of reservoirs, and other types of water infrastructure, on the spatiotemporal distribution of both water availability and demand.


Related Links
Uppsala University
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics

WATER WORLD
Dam problems, win-win solutions
Orono ME (SPX) Nov 06, 2018
Decisions about whether to build, remove or modify dams involve complex trade-offs that are often accompanied by social and political conflict. A group of researchers from the natural and social sciences, engineering, arts and humanities has joined forces to show how, where and when it may be possible to achieve a more efficient balance among these trade-offs. Their work is featured in a paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). b>What's the dam problem? br> / ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

WATER WORLD
Mattis to travel to Mexican border, Wyoming on Wednesday

Chemical spill leaves 52 ill in east China

Rio de Janeiro landslide kills 14

Marine combat veteran kills 12 in crowded California bar

WATER WORLD
Thermal testing of the magnetometer boom

Flying focus: Controlling lasers through time and space

A two-atom quantum duet

Flow units: Dynamic defects in metallic glasses

WATER WORLD
Shrinking Sea of Galilee has some hoping for a miracle

States to decide fate of depleted bigeye tuna

Coup-plagued Fiji goes to the polls

Scientists theorize new origin story for Earth's water

WATER WORLD
Business as usual for Antarctic krill despite ocean acidification

ESA's gravity-mapper reveals relics of ancient continents under Antarctic ice

How much debris is lying on glaciers

Far fewer lakes below the East Antarctic Ice Sheet than previously believed

WATER WORLD
New tool to predict which plants will become invasive

Fruit, vegetable shapes controlled by newly discovered genetic mechanism

Exposure to pesticides makes bees less social, reduces colony size

In China's Himalayas, a wine 'flying above the clouds'

WATER WORLD
Death toll from Jordan floods rises to 13 as girl's body found

Qatar again hit by heavy rainfall

Floods in Jordan kill 12, force tourists to flee Petra

Philippines marks five years since its deadliest storm

WATER WORLD
Two thirds of African cities face 'extreme climate risk'

3 civilians killed in attack targeting foreign troops in Mali

Comoros displays captured 'rebel' arsenal

Army court drops lawsuit against Cameroon journalist: lawyer

WATER WORLD
Climate change likely caused migration, demise of ancient Indus Valley civilization

Experts find that stone tools connected communities

Archaeologists can determine a person's sex by analyzing a single tooth

Pressure on girls for perfect body 'worse than ever', says Orbach