Water Supply and Scarcity
According to the United Nations, water scarcity is defined as the point at which the aggregate impact of all users impinges on the supply or quality of water. Water scarcity is a relative concept and can occur at any level of supply or demand. Scarcity may be socially-constructed or the consequence of altered supply patterns stemming from climate change. Resources available in this sub-theme include U.S. drought monitoring data, workshops for rural water supply systems, among other resources that support water supply and scarcity.
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Water Supply and Scarcity Resources
Water Challenges and Cooperative Response in the Middle East and North Africa
Published:
November 1, 2012Henry L. Stimson Center
This report first provides a brief overview of available water resources in the MENA region. It then discusses the salient socio-economic and environmental stresses and trends that will drive and condition water supply and demand over the coming decades. Next, the report sketches prevailing water...Read more
Regional focus:
Middle East and North AfricaTroubled Waters: Climate Change, Hydropolitics, and Transboundary Resources
Published:
January 1, 2009Henry L. Stimson Center
Troubled Waters: Climate Change, Hydropolitics, and Transboundary Resources examines the environmental dangers and policy dilemmas confronting the sustainable management of shared water resources in a warming world. It present analyses by regional experts as well as by Stimson staff. The content of...Read more
Regional focus:
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