Abstract

Achieving urban water security is a major challenge for many countries. While several studies have assessed water security at a regional level, many studies have also emphasized the lack of assessment of water security and application of measures to achieve it at the urban level. Recent studies that have focused on measuring urban water security are not holistic, and there is still no agreed-upon understanding of how to operationalize and identify an assessment framework to measure the current state and dynamics of water security. At present, there is also no clearly defined and widely endorsed definition of urban water security. To address this challenge, this study provides a systematic approach to better understand urban water security, with a working definition and an assessment framework to be applied in peri-urban and urban areas. The proposed working definition of urban water security is based on the United Nations (UN) sustainable development goal on water and sanitation and the human rights on water and sanitation. It captures issues of urban-level technical, environmental, and socio-economic indicators that emphasize credibility, legitimacy, and salience. The assessment framework depends on four main dimensions to achieve urban water security: Drinking water and human beings, ecosystem, climate change and water-related hazards, and socio-economic factors (DECS). The framework further enables the analysis of relationships and trade-off between urbanization and water security, as well as between DECS indicators. Applying this framework will help governments, policy-makers, and water stakeholders to target scant resources more effectively and sustainably. The study reveals that achieving urban water security requires a holistic and integrated approach with collaborative stakeholders to provide a meaningful way to improve understanding and managing urban water security.

Highlights

  • The world is becoming predominantly urban, dominated by human settlements and economic activities

  • This study suggests changes in the United Nations (UN)-Water definition to derive perspectives from the sustainable development goal of clean water and sanitation “SDG6” and the UN human rights of water and sanitation in Resolution 64/292, which specifies different elements embedded in urban water security [74]

  • Pn wi xi = Pi=n 1 wi xi i = 1 wi Framing the challenge of urban water security goes beyond single-issue indicators such as water quantity, water quality, or access to water sanitation

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Summary

Introduction

The world is becoming predominantly urban, dominated by human settlements and economic activities. Urbanization, urban water security, and economic growth move in tandem. For growth to be sustainable, the urban water security implications of rapid urbanization need to be at the center of the national and municipal development agenda [2,3,4]. The concept of urban water security is a multi-faceted one and is interrelated with the broader frameworks and concepts of urban metabolism, ecological security, integrated urban water management, the web of water–energy–food securities, risk management, resilient and adaptive water management, and water-sensitive cities [2,3,4,5,6]. A clear understanding of the synergies and trade-offs between these frameworks will provide more clarity on what urban water security means and will help with systematically operationalizing the concept of water security, including at the urban level

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