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The researchers found that city elites over-consume water for their own leisure activities, such as filling their pools, watering their gardens or washing their cars. Photo Credit: Joe Ciciarelli |
Rich elites with large pools and well-kept lawns deprive poorer groups of basic access to water in cities around the world. Social inequality is a major cause of urban water scarcity than environmental factors such as climate change or urban population growth. This shows a new study, led by Uppsala University and now published in Nature Sustainability.
"Our study shows that the only way to preserve available water resources is to change privileged lifestyles, limit the amount of water used for recreational purposes and distribute income and water resources more evenly. Future strategies for secure water supply and drought resistance must be more proactive and be able to identify and counteract long-term inequality and unsustainable patterns that create the type of water crisis in cities we saw in Cape Town," says Dr. Elisa Savelli at Uppsala University who led the study.
The study was conducted with colleagues at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam in the Netherlands and the University of Manchester and the University of Reading in the United Kingdom. They have developed a model that analyzes how water is used by households in Cape Town, which in turn gives an understanding of how different classes of society consume water. They found that city elites over-consume water for their own leisure activities, such as filling their pools, watering their gardens or washing their cars.