Citation:
Holman I.P. and Trawick, P., Developing adaptive capacity within groundwater abstraction management systems. Journal of Environmental Management, Volume 92, Issue 6, June 2011, Pages 1542-1549
Abstract:
Groundwater is a key resource for global agricultural production but is
vulnerable to a changing climate. Given significant uncertainty about future
impacts, bottom-up approaches for developing adaptive capacity are a more
appropriate paradigm than seeking optimal adaptation strategies that assume a
high ability to predict future risks or outcomes. This paper analyses the
groundwater management practices adopted at multiple scales in East Anglia, UK,
to identify wider lessons for developing adaptive capacity within groundwater
management. Key elements are (1) horizontal and vertical integration within
resource management; (2) making better use of water resources, at all scales,
which vary in space and time; (3) embedding adaptation at multiple scales (from
farm to national) within an adaptive management framework which allows
strategies and management decisions to be updated in the light of changing
understanding or conditions; (4) facilitating the ongoing formation through
collective action of local Water Abstractor Groups; (5) promoting efficient use
of scarce water resources by these groups, so as to increase their power to
negotiate over possible short-term license restrictions; (6) controlling
abstractions within a sustainable resource management framework, whether at
national (regulatory) or at local (Abstractor Group) scales, that takes account
of environmental water needs; and (7) reducing non-climate pressures which have
the potential to further reduce the availability of usable groundwater. (C) 2011
Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.