让恶性循环良性循环:促进美国西南部无管制用户用水安全的研究和政策议程。

WIREs Water Pub Date : 2024-05-16 DOI:10.1002/wat2.1731
K. Dobbin, Ariana Hernandez, Darcy Bostic, Grace Harrison, Aaryaman Singhal, Matthew Barnett, Itzel Vasquez‐Rodriguez, Gregory Pierce, Kate Sawyer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在美国,大多数居民从受联邦《安全饮用水法》监管的集中式公用事业公司获得用水。然而,还有相当一部分美国居民通过分散方式满足家庭用水需求,包括家用水井、小型供水系统和运输水。这些不受联邦政府监管的用水户最容易受到气候变化的影响,尤其是在西南部等干旱地区。然而,部落、联邦、州和地方各级对这些用户的监测和监管并不一致。与受监管的用户相比,只有极少数计划能帮助这些人群获得并维持安全、可负担的饮用水。这种忽视造成了一种恶性循环,即人们对他们的水安全需求仍然知之甚少,也没有得到充分解决。我们回顾了现有的数据来源、法规、援助项目以及与美国西南部未受管制用水户相关的已发表研究,以说明这种有害的反馈循环。然后,我们提出了四个关键干预领域,以将这一恶性循环转变为良性循环。借鉴新兴文献对模块化、适应性和分散式(MAD)水利基础设施的新见解,我们强调了投资和创新的机会,以支持在现有集中式基础设施投资的同时提供分散式服务,以及在设计和实施此类政策时关注公正性的关键需求。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Making a vicious cycle virtuous: A research and policy agenda for advancing the water security of unregulated users in the Southwestern U.S.
In the United States, most residents receive water from centralized utilities regulated under the federal Safe Drinking Water Act. Yet, a sizable portion of U.S. residents satisfy their household water needs through decentralized means, including domestic wells, very small water systems, and hauled water. These federally unregulated water users are among the most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change, particularly in aridifying regions like the Southwest. They are, however, inconsistently monitored and regulated at the Tribal, federal, state, and local levels. Compared to regulated users, very few programs exist to assist this population in securing and maintaining safe, affordable drinking water access. This neglect creates a vicious cycle whereby their water security needs remain both poorly understood and inadequately addressed. We review available data sources, regulations, assistance programs, and published studies relevant to unregulated water users across the Southwestern U.S. to illustrate this injurious feedback loop. We then propose four key areas for intervention to transform this vicious cycle into a virtuous one. Drawing on new insights from the emerging literature on modular, adaptive, and decentralized (MAD) water infrastructure, we highlight opportunities for investment and innovation to support decentralized service alongside existing investments in centralized infrastructure, and the critical need to attend to justice in the design and implementation of such policies.This article is categorized under: Science of Water > Water and Environmental Change Human Water > Water Governance Human Water > Rights to Water
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