2015
DOI: 10.1002/wat2.1105
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The changing water cycle: climatic and socioeconomic drivers of water‐related changes in the Andes of Peru

Abstract: Water resources in high mountains play a fundamental role for societies and ecosystems both locally and downstream. Impacts of global change, including climate change, glacier shrinkage, and socioeconomic forces related to demographics, agroindustrial development, and hydroelectricity generation; pose new hydrological risks for human livelihoods. However, these hydroclimatic and socioeconomic drivers of water resource change are often poorly quantified and interconnected, while data scarcity poses challenges i… Show more

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Cited by 78 publications
(80 citation statements)
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References 117 publications
(326 reference statements)
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“…glacier retreat and its impact on meltwater availability downstream) has emerged over the past decade, there is an increasing realization that the water demand side may be an equally, if not more, important aspect of this equation Drenkhan et al, 2015;Rasmussen, 2016;Carey et al, 2017). Buytaert and de Bievre (2012) for example analyzed future water supply and demand for four large cities in the Andes (Bogota, Quito, Lima, La Paz), of which one (La Paz) receives a significant water supply contribution from glacier melt, under a range of future scenarios.…”
Section: Socio-economic (Water Demand Side) Projectionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…glacier retreat and its impact on meltwater availability downstream) has emerged over the past decade, there is an increasing realization that the water demand side may be an equally, if not more, important aspect of this equation Drenkhan et al, 2015;Rasmussen, 2016;Carey et al, 2017). Buytaert and de Bievre (2012) for example analyzed future water supply and demand for four large cities in the Andes (Bogota, Quito, Lima, La Paz), of which one (La Paz) receives a significant water supply contribution from glacier melt, under a range of future scenarios.…”
Section: Socio-economic (Water Demand Side) Projectionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To anticipate these issues and identify hotspots of water shortage and potential conflict, it is essential to understand the spatiotemporal patterns of water demand and how they interact with a changing supply. Within this context, political constellations as well as economic and marketdriven aspects will largely determine priorities for water allocation (Drenkhan et al, 2015). Water rights are distributed based on historical practices and trends, but also based on political conditions, economic agendas, institutional capacity, laws and legal structures, and cultural values.…”
Section: Socio-economic (Water Demand Side) Projectionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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