可持续和弹性的水和能源未来:从新的伦理和选择到城市联系战略

J. Sperling, W. Sarni
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引用次数: 4

摘要

为了生命、健康和经济,一个安全、可靠和负担得起的用水未来是一种新的水管理和能源管理伦理的基本成果。目前的水和能源系统照旧运作,并没有为城市和农村社区带来可持续、健康和有弹性的道路。今天,估计有4亿人生活在严重缺水的城市。然而,由于基础设施老化,目前城市地区甚至在使用之前就损失了25%的水(在一些城市高达60%)。此外,在发展中国家,平均只有10%的废水在返回水体之前得到处理。到2040年,超过66%的世界人口将面临严重的水资源短缺;到2050年,城市用水需求(比目前水平)增加80%,可能导致10亿城市居民和36%(三分之一)的城市面临水危机。危机往往是创新的催化剂,本章呼吁城市采取战略应对措施,从传统的“孤岛”基础设施、水资源过度分配和新出现的道德困境转向与水和能源相关的综合城市关系战略。世纪,城市之间既有差异又有相似之处。积极的战略和综合的应对措施侧重于越来越多的面临风险的城市,因为创新前线可能会继续出现。这些例子也激发了对长期影响的持续探索,利用数据来了解如何最好地帮助降低成本,改善水安全,实现基础设施资产现代化,建立弹性和确保可持续的收入模式。
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Sustainable and Resilient Water and Energy Futures: From New Ethics and Choices to Urban Nexus Strategies
A safe, secure and affordable water future—for life, health, economy—are foundational outcomes from a new form of ethics for water stewardship and energy management. Current business as usual in water and energy systems have not led to sustainable, healthy nor resilient pathways for urban and rural communities alike. Today, an esti mated 400 million people live in cities with significant water shortages. This is while 25% of water is currently lost before even used in urban areas (up to 60% in some cities) due to aging infrastructure. In addition, on average, only 10% of wastewater is treated before returning to water bodies in developing countries. By 2040, more than 66% of the world’s populations could suffer from severe water shortages; and by 2050, an 80% increase in urban water demand (over current levels) may result in one billion city dwellers and 36% (one in three) of cities expected to face water crises. A crisis is often a catalyst for innovation and this chapter is a call to cities to enable strategic responses—moving away from legacy ‘siloed’ infrastructures, over-allocated water resources and emerging ethical dilemmas to integrated water- and energy-related urban nexus strategies. century, with both differences and similarities between cities. Proactive strategies and integrated responses focused on the growing number of cities at risk as frontlines for innova tion may continue to emerge. These examples also motivate questions for ongoing exploring of long-term impacts, using data to generate understanding on how best to help reduce costs, improve water security, modernize infrastructure assets, build resilience and ensure sustain able revenue models.
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