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Towards bridging the water gap in Texas: A water-energy-food nexus approach.

Authors :
Daher, Bassel
Lee, Sang-Hyun
Kaushik, Vishakha
Blake, John
Askariyeh, Mohammad H.
Shafiezadeh, Hamid
Zamaripa, Sonia
Mohtar, Rabi H.
Source :
Science of the Total Environment. Jan2019, Vol. 647, p449-463. 15p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Abstract The 2017 Texas Water Development Board's State Water Plan predicts a 41% gap between water demand and existing supply by 2070. This reflects an overall projection, but the challenge will affect various regions of the state differently. Texas has 16 regional water planning zones characterized by distinct populations, water demands, and existing water supplies. Each is expected to face variations of pressures, such as increased agricultural and energy development (particularly hydraulic fracturing) and urban growth that do not necessarily follow the region's water plan. Great variability in resource distribution and competing resource demands across Texas will result in the emergence of distinct hotspots, each with unique characteristics that require multiple, localized, interventions to bridge the statewide water gap. This study explores three such hotspots: 1) water-food competition in Lubbock and the potential of producing 3 billion gallons of treated municipal waste water and encouraging dryland agriculture; 2) implementing Low Impact Developments (LIDs) for agriculture in the City of San Antonio, potentially adding 47 billion gallons of water supply, but carrying a potentially high financial cost; and 3) water-energy interrelations in the Eagle Ford Shale in light of well counts, climate dynamics, and population growth. The growing water gap is a state wide problem that requires holistic assessments that capture the impact on the tightly interconnected water, energy, and food systems. Better understanding the trade-offs associated with each 'solution' and enabling informed dialogue between stakeholders, offers a basis for formulating localized policy recommendations specific to each hotspot. Graphical abstract Spatially distributed distinct and complex hotspots, which require a holistic system of system approach, yet with localized solutions for bridging the water gap. Unlabelled Image Highlights • Bridging Texas water gap requires multi-stakeholder, holistic, localized approaches. • Potential savings of 3 billion gal of water in Lubbock by treating water and dryland agriculture • Potential of adding 47 billion gallons to water supply in San Antonio by LID implementation • Economic advantages vs. impact on local water quality and quantity of Hydraulic Fracturing [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00489697
Volume :
647
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Science of the Total Environment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
132013903
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.07.398