Abstract

Twentieth-century water policies relied on the construction of massive infrastructure in the form of dams, aqueducts, pipelines, and complex centralized treatment plants to meet human demands. These facilities brought tremendous benefits to billions of people, but they also had serious and often unanticipated social, economical, and ecological costs. Many unsolved water problems remain, and past approaches no longer seem sufficient. A transition is under way to a “soft path” that complements centralized physical infrastructure with lower cost community-scale systems, decentralized and open decision-making, water markets and equitable pricing, application of efficient technology, and environmental protection.

Keywords

BusinessPipeline transportNatural resource economicsPath (computing)Water resourcesEnvironmental economicsEnvironmental resource managementEnvironmental planningRisk analysis (engineering)Computer scienceEnvironmental scienceEconomicsEcologyEnvironmental engineering

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2003
Type
article
Volume
302
Issue
5650
Pages
1524-1528
Citations
1335
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

1335
OpenAlex

Cite This

Peter H. Gleick (2003). Global Freshwater Resources: Soft-Path Solutions for the 21st Century. Science , 302 (5650) , 1524-1528. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1089967

Identifiers

DOI
10.1126/science.1089967