Challenges and opportunities for more efficient water use and circular wastewater management. The case of Campania Region, Italy

2021 ◽  
Vol 297 ◽  
pp. 113171
Author(s):  
M. Colella ◽  
M. Ripa ◽  
A. Cocozza ◽  
C. Panfilo ◽  
S. Ulgiati
2005 ◽  
Vol 5 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 295-301
Author(s):  
J.S. Buckle

This article describes a successful awareness and education project undertaken in an East Rand township by the Water Cycle Management Section of Rand Water. The Project's focus was to create awareness in the community of the broad concept of water cycle management within an environment and to transfer skills to community members (facilitators) who could then assist in ensuring effective and efficient water use.


2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rumana Asad ◽  
Iftekhar Ahmed ◽  
Josephine Vaughan ◽  
Jason von Meding

Purpose Urban flooding in developing countries of the Global South is growing due to extreme rainfall and sea-level rise induced by climate change, as well as the proliferation of impervious, built-up areas resulting from unplanned urbanisation and development. Continuous loss of traditional knowledge related to local water management practices, and the de-valuing of such knowledge that goes hand-in-hand with globalised aspirations, is inhibiting flood resilience efforts. This paper aims to address the need to include traditional water knowledge (TWK) in urban living and development processes in the Global South. Design/methodology/approach This paper commences with a review of existing frameworks that focus on natural resource management, critically assessing two existing frameworks of traditional ecological knowledge (TEK). The assessment of the existing approaches contributes to this paper’s development of a novel framework to promote TWK with regard to resilience and risk reduction, specifically for developing flood adaptive strategies, which is the second stage of this paper. Finally, the paper explains how the framework can contribute to the field of urban design and planning using examples from the literature to demonstrate challenges and opportunities related to the adaptation of such a framework. Findings The framework developed in this paper reveals three proposed vertices of TWK, named as place-based landscape knowledge, water use and management and water values. This framework has the potential to produce context-specific knowledge that can contribute to flood-resilient built-environment through urban design and practices. Research limitations/implications The framework developed in this paper reveals three proposed vertices of TWK, named place-based landscape knowledge, water use and management and water values. This framework has the potential to produce context-specific knowledge that can contribute to flood-resilient built-environment through urban design and practices. Originality/value Within the field of TEK research, very few researchers have explored the field of developing flood resilience in an urban context. The proposed TWK framework presented in this paper will help to fill that gap.


2005 ◽  
Vol 97 (2) ◽  
pp. 364-372 ◽  
Author(s):  
David C. Nielsen ◽  
Paul W. Unger ◽  
Perry R. Miller

Irrigation demand in humid regions is at present primarily determined by population growth and the consequent food demand. Most of the population is in Asia, and most of the food demand is for rice. Rice production has increased in recent years at rates considerably ahead of projections. Advances in research on rain-fed rice suggest that the high demand of rice for water may be reduced, and yields in rain-fed areas increased significantly. Thus projections of irrigation demand in humid areas may be greater than necessary. Higher yields have led to lower rice prices in real terms, so that investment in new irrigation systems, including shallow tube-well systems, may be uneconomic if rice is to be the principal crop produced. Rehabilitation and improved management of existing systems can lead to more efficient water use, and a much better investment of resources. As the rice demand is satisfied, irrigation will increasingly be used for other crops. In Africa and Latin America only limited irrigation development has taken place in humid regions, although substantial opportunities exist.


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