A Review of the United States' Past and Projected Water Use |
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Authors: | Debra Perrone George Hornberger Oscar van Vliet Marijn van der Velde |
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Institution: | 1. Woods Institute, Stanford University, Stanford, California;2. Vanderbilt Institute for Energy and Environment, Nashville, Tennessee;3. Institute for Environmental Decisions, ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland;4. European Commission ‐ Joint Research Centre, Ispra, Italy |
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Abstract: | Good information and data on water demands are needed to perform good analyses, yet collecting and compiling spatially and temporally consistent water demand data are challenges. The objective of our work was to understand the limitations associated with water‐use estimates and projections. We performed a comprehensive literature review of national and regional United States (U.S.) water‐use estimates and projections. We explored trends in past regional projections of freshwater withdrawals and compared these values to regional estimates of freshwater withdrawals made by the U.S. Geological Survey. Our results suggest a suite of limitations exist that have the potential for influencing analyses aiming to extract explanatory variables from the data or using the data to make projections and forecasts. As we explored regional projections, we paid special attention to the two largest water demand‐side sectors — thermoelectric energy and irrigation — and found thermoelectric projections are more spread out than irrigation projections. All data related to water use have limitations, and there is no alternative to making the best use that we can of the available data; our article provides a comprehensive review of these limitations so that water managers can be more informed. |
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Keywords: | water resources management: planning water use water allocation water‐use projections water‐use trends |
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