2014
DOI: 10.3390/w6123934
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Sustainable Water Management in Urban, Agricultural, and Natural Systems

Abstract: Sustainable water management (SWM) requires allocating between competing water sector demands, and balancing the financial and social resources required to support necessary water systems. The objective of this review is to assess SWM in three sectors: urban, agricultural, and natural systems. This review explores the following questions: (1) How is SWM defined and evaluated? (2) What are the challenges associated with sustainable development in each sector? (3) What are the areas of greatest potential improve… Show more

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Cited by 94 publications
(59 citation statements)
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“…2016 methane, N 2 O and other greenhouse gas emissions were aggregated into CO 2 equivalent emissions in accordance with their respective global warming potential). In the present research, Global Warming Potential (GWP) (kg CO 2 -Eq) was chosen as the main environmental impact because of its worldwide effect, which makes it the greatest environmental challenge presently facing the sustainable water management of the world (Russo et al, 2014). Some other environmental impacts corresponded to acidification (kg SO 2 -Eq), and stratospheric ozone depletion (SOD/kgCFC-11-Eq).…”
Section: Impact Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2016 methane, N 2 O and other greenhouse gas emissions were aggregated into CO 2 equivalent emissions in accordance with their respective global warming potential). In the present research, Global Warming Potential (GWP) (kg CO 2 -Eq) was chosen as the main environmental impact because of its worldwide effect, which makes it the greatest environmental challenge presently facing the sustainable water management of the world (Russo et al, 2014). Some other environmental impacts corresponded to acidification (kg SO 2 -Eq), and stratospheric ozone depletion (SOD/kgCFC-11-Eq).…”
Section: Impact Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Where credible viands are used as high value crops, the value of water can be high [6]. Agricultural water use accounts for about three quarters of total global consumption; in many developing countries, irrigation represents over 90% of water used [10].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In recent years, there has been an increase in the domestic use of engineered nanoparticles (Babakhani, Bridge, Doong, & Phenrat, 2017), which has coincided with their release into sewage (Benn, Cavanagh, Hristovski, Posner, & Westerhoff, 2010) and the environment (Hoppe et al, 2015). The presence of these harmful colloids in treated wastewater for irrigation (Russo, Alfredo, & Fisher, 2014) is a risk to human health and the environment (Molnar, Johnson, Gerhard, Willson, & O'Carroll, 2015). In environmental engineering, the performance of novel remediation techniques for soil contaminated with organic materials, metals or halogenated organic compounds using nano-and microparticles (Mueller & Nowack, 2010) depends on accessibility to the contaminated soil sites (Pan & Xing, 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%