TY - JOUR
T1 - Guiding cities under increased droughts
T2 - The limits to sustainable urban futures
AU - Cremades, Roger
AU - Sanchez-Plaza, Anabel
AU - Hewitt, Richard J.
AU - Mitter, Hermine
AU - Baggio, Jacopo A.
AU - Olazabal, Marta
AU - Broekman, Annelies
AU - Kropf, Bernadette
AU - Tudose, Nicu Constantin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Author(s)
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Climate change is likely to increase droughts. The vulnerability of cities to droughts is increasing worldwide. Policy responses from cities to droughts lack consideration of long-term climatic and socio-economic scenarios, and focus on short-term emergency actions that disregard sustainability in the connected regional and river basin systems. We aim to explore the dynamics of the water-energy-land nexus in urban systems suffering increased climate change-related droughts, and their implications for sustainability. We complement a case study with a literature review providing cross-regional insights, and detail pervasive knowledge, policy and ambition gaps in the interaction between cities and droughts. We show that water availability with low emissions, without compromising ecosystems and with low costs to society, poses a local-scale limit to sustainable urban growth, a new concept delineating the limits to growth in cities. We conclude that urban and river basin planners need to institutionalize transparency and cross-sectoral integration in multi-sector partnerships, to consider long-term land use planning together with water and energy, and to apply integrated climate services to cities. Our study reveals the importance of including land, water and energy in long-term urban planning, and to connect them with the county, region, river basin and global scales.
AB - Climate change is likely to increase droughts. The vulnerability of cities to droughts is increasing worldwide. Policy responses from cities to droughts lack consideration of long-term climatic and socio-economic scenarios, and focus on short-term emergency actions that disregard sustainability in the connected regional and river basin systems. We aim to explore the dynamics of the water-energy-land nexus in urban systems suffering increased climate change-related droughts, and their implications for sustainability. We complement a case study with a literature review providing cross-regional insights, and detail pervasive knowledge, policy and ambition gaps in the interaction between cities and droughts. We show that water availability with low emissions, without compromising ecosystems and with low costs to society, poses a local-scale limit to sustainable urban growth, a new concept delineating the limits to growth in cities. We conclude that urban and river basin planners need to institutionalize transparency and cross-sectoral integration in multi-sector partnerships, to consider long-term land use planning together with water and energy, and to apply integrated climate services to cities. Our study reveals the importance of including land, water and energy in long-term urban planning, and to connect them with the county, region, river basin and global scales.
KW - Benidorm
KW - Climate Change
KW - Climate Services
KW - Limits to Growth
KW - Mediterranean Basin
KW - Metropolitan Area
KW - Urban Land Use System
KW - Water Scarcity
KW - Water-Energy-Land Nexus
U2 - 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2021.107140
DO - 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2021.107140
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85110641623
SN - 0921-8009
VL - 189
JO - Ecological Economics
JF - Ecological Economics
M1 - 107140
ER -