Authors
Robert I McDonald, Pamela Green, Deborah Balk, Balazs M Fekete, Carmen Revenga, Megan Todd, Mark Montgomery
Publication date
2011/4/12
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
108
Issue
15
Pages
6312-6317
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Nearly 3 billion additional urban dwellers are forecasted by 2050, an unprecedented wave of urban growth. While cities struggle to provide water to these new residents, they will also face equally unprecedented hydrologic changes due to global climate change. Here we use a detailed hydrologic model, demographic projections, and climate change scenarios to estimate per-capita water availability for major cities in the developing world, where urban growth is the fastest. We estimate the amount of water physically available near cities and do not account for problems with adequate water delivery or quality. Modeled results show that currently 150 million people live in cities with perennial water shortage, defined as having less than 100 L per person per day of sustainable surface and groundwater flow within their urban extent. By 2050, demographic growth will increase this figure to almost 1 billion people …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
RI McDonald, P Green, D Balk, BM Fekete, C Revenga… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2011