2018
DOI: 10.1029/2018wr023452
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Water Sector Assumptions for the Shared Socioeconomic Pathways in an Integrated Modeling Framework

Abstract: The Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSPs) were developed without explicit assumptions for the future of the water sector; therefore, projections of future water demands based on the SSPs often lack a treatment of water technology assumptions that is consistent with the SSP storylines. This study has developed a set of qualitative and quantitative assumptions for future water sector technological advancements in the agricultural, electricity, manufacturing, and municipal sectors within the SSPs and then applied … Show more

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Cited by 53 publications
(47 citation statements)
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“…Human-dominated, water scarcity increases (H+) occur in 60% of the globe while 22% experiences decreasing scarcity due to humans (H−). Significant differences arise across SSPs as socioeconomic differences drive efficiency improvements, demand changes, and altered water dependency , Graham et al 2018. SSP1 experiences a shift from H+ to H− in a large amount of land throughout the century, leading to just 36% of the globe classified as H+ in 2100, while humans act to decrease water scarcity in 44%.…”
Section: Main Drivers Of Water Scarcity Changesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Human-dominated, water scarcity increases (H+) occur in 60% of the globe while 22% experiences decreasing scarcity due to humans (H−). Significant differences arise across SSPs as socioeconomic differences drive efficiency improvements, demand changes, and altered water dependency , Graham et al 2018. SSP1 experiences a shift from H+ to H− in a large amount of land throughout the century, leading to just 36% of the globe classified as H+ in 2100, while humans act to decrease water scarcity in 44%.…”
Section: Main Drivers Of Water Scarcity Changesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Meanwhile, much of the midwestern United States is shown to have human driven scarcity decreases in 2050 and 2100, unlike what has been shown in some previous studies . Prescribed SSP-specific improvements in water use technologies (Graham et al 2018), are likely to cause human-driven water scarcity decreases, particularly in regions where population is not expected to change dramatically in the future (Samir and Lutz 2017) while GDP growth is expected to allow for water use improvements across many SSPs . Nearly all of Africa experiences counteracting water scarcity effects as population driven increases in demand lead to increases in scarcity, while climate-driven increases in precipitation increase water supply and thus lower scarcity (supplementary figure S11).…”
Section: Co-evolution Of Human and Climate Impactsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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