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Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal When climate change is a fact! Adaptive strategies for drinking water production in a changing natural environment

Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal

Meuleman AFM, Cirkel G, Zwolsman GJJ
2007
Water Science and Technology : A Journal of The International Association on Water Pollution Research. 56 (4): 137-144

Climate change increases water system dynamics through temperature changes, changes in precipitation patterns, evaporation, and water quality and water storage in ice packs. Water system dependent economical stakeholders, such as drinking water companies in the Netherlands, have to cope with consequences of climate change, e.g. floods and water shortages in river systems, upcoming of brackish ground water, salt water intrusion, increasing peak demands and microbiological activity due to temperature rise. In the past decades, however, both water systems and drinking water production have become more and more inflexible; water systems have been heavily regulated aiming at maximum security and economic functions and the drinking water supply in the Netherlands has grown into an inflexible, but cheap and reliable, system. At a water catchment scale, flexibility and adaptation are solutions to overcome climate change related consequences. Flexible adaptive strategies for drinking water production comprise new sources for drinking water production, application of storage concepts in the short term, and a redesign of large centralized systems, including flexible treatment plants, in the long term. Transition to flexible concepts will take decades because investment depreciation periods of assets are long. These strategies must be based on thorough knowledge of current assets to seize opportunities for change. © IWA Publishing 2007.

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Resource Description

    Extreme Weather-Related Event or Disaster, Precipitation, Temperature, Water Quality, Water Security
    • Extreme Weather-Related Event or Disaster, Precipitation, Temperature, Water Quality, Water Security: Flood
    • Extreme Weather-Related Event or Disaster, Precipitation, Temperature, Water Quality, Water Security: Marine/Freshwater Chemical, Marine/Freshwater Pathogen
    Freshwater
    Non-United States
    • Non-United States: Europe
    Infectious Disease
    Research Article, Review Article
    Adaptation, Communication
    • Adaptation, Communication: Adaptation Co-Benefit/Co-Harm, Intervention, Vulnerability Assessment
    • Adaptation, Communication: Other communication Audience, Specify
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