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OverviewThis book provides a solid foundation for a comprehensive, systemic and water-centric approach to water management. Said approach integrates two performance principles essential for sustainable water use systems, namely equity and efficiency. Further, it decreases the policy space for decision-making encountered by water managers and makes it easier to arrive at reasonable solutions because of the bounded rationality inherent in its development. By combining the distributive and aggregative principles, the approach offers a transparent and autonomous structure for gathering water data and enabling stakeholder involvement. Lastly, it employs and promotes a unifying language for all types of water use systems, e.g. urban, agricultural and industrial. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Naim HaiePublisher: Springer Verlag, Singapore Imprint: Springer Verlag, Singapore Edition: 1st ed. 2021 Weight: 0.454kg ISBN: 9789811562860ISBN 10: 9811562865 Pages: 119 Publication Date: 22 June 2021 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of Contents1. Introduction 1.1. Water Security, Governance or Management 1.2. Bounded Rationality 2. Terminology 2.1. Water Use System (WUS) 2.2. Pillars: Quantity, Quality, Benefits 2.3. Water Use and Reuse 2.4. Binary Opposites in Water 2.5. Water Loss of flows and systems 2.5.1. Unrecoverables 3. Theory 3.1. Five FIWs (Foundational Ideas about a WUS) 3.2. Learning with Stakeholders 3.3. Smart Water Use Systems 4. Sefficiency (Sustainable efficiency) 4.1. Proof of Sefficiency Indicators 4.2. Levels of Management 4.3. Weights 4.3.1. Quality attribute 4.3.2. Beneficial attribute 4.3.3. Usefulness Criterion 4.4. Trade-offs 4.4.1. Jevons Paradox 4.4.2. Differentials 4.4.3. Graphs 4.5. Alternatives 4.5.1. Classical Efficiency 4.5.2. Water Productivity 4.5.3. Effective Efficiency 4.5.4. Resiliency 5. Sequity (Sustainable equity) 5.1. Segments 5.2. Equity Revisited 5.3. Targets 5.4. Policies 5.4.1. Type I 5.4.2. Type II 5.4.3. Type III 5.4.4. Type IV 5.5. Reality Check 5.6. Phases in decision-making 6. Applications 6.1. An Illusion 6.2. Urban 1 6.3. Urban 2 6.4. Farm 6.5. Water, Energy, Food 7. Annexes 7.1. Symbols 7.2. Sefficiency template 7.3. Equivalency 7.4. Evapotranspiration 7.4.1. Temperature 7.4.2. Penman-Monteith 7.4.3. Hargreaves-Samani ReferencesReviewsAuthor InformationNaim Haie is a Professor of Water Resources and the Environment at the University of Minho, Portugal. Holding a Ph.D. from Utah State University, USA, he has been involved in projects in Asia, the Americas and Europe. His team was actively involved in the final approval of the European Union (EU) Water Framework Directive during Portugal’s EU Presidency. Recently, he has developed the Sefficiency (Sustainable efficiency) and Sequity (Sustainable equity) frameworks to promote the best water management practices. He was the first to develop a hydrodynamic model of (surged) irrigation using an Eulerian system, and has served as Director and Vice-President of the Executive Board at the International Water Resources Association. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |