T1 (Theme 1)
Session Details
T1 S1a
Moderator: | Andreas Haarstrick |
Date/Time: | 09.10.2024, 11:30 – 13:00 |
Location: | Aula |
T1 S1b
Moderator: | Andreas Haarstrick |
Date/Time: | 09.10.2024, 14:15 – 15:45 |
Location: | Aula |
Description
The integrated approach to urban-rural water management requires interdisciplinary approaches and the bringing together of components that impact urban water management, such as stormwater and flood control, wastewater treatment, water supply and solid waste, and rural areas with watersheds, groundwater and agricultural activities. This interaction between urban and rural areas can be seen, for example, in the impacts caused by the disproportionate growth of urban areas. For example, the availability and quality of water in surrounding rural areas can be affected by excessive and uncontrolled water consumption and the discharge of untreated wastewater, which in turn affects the overall quality and availability of water.
A successful linkage between the urban system and the watershed requires social participation and integrated management to achieve optimal social, economic and environmental outcomes. This ensures that processes and outcomes meet sustainability requirements.
These topics are part of this session, with a particular focus on the extent to which integrated concepts can ensure efficient and sustainable use of water resources, both in planning and in the expansion of the urban area.
Speaker
T1 S1a
Time | ID | Name | Title |
11:30 - 11:35 | --- | Moderator | Welcome & Introduction |
11:35 - 11:50 | 78 |
Mohamed
Abu-hashim |
Natural Based Solution for Waste Water Treatments and Climate Changes using Constructed Wetland in Urban-rural Area |
11:50 - 12:05 | 190 | Sarah Remmei | Integrated Groundwater Management for Urban Rural Water Resilience in Piedmont Region |
12:05 - 12:20 | 290 | Giovanny Mosquera | From water towers to urban centers: Does tropical alpine natural infrastructure provide water security to a high-Andean city? |
12:20 - 12:35 | 369 | Girish Raj Lamsal | Optimal operation of multi-reservoir system for urban and rural water management: A case study from South Asia |
12:35 - 13:00 | --- | All | Group Discussion & Closing |
T1 S1b
Time | ID | Name | Title |
14:15 - 14:20 | --- | Moderator | Welcome & Introduction |
14:20 - 14:35 | 388 | Sarath Hulihali Manjunatha | Hydrosocial Regimes and Water Security in Bangalore: An Analysis of Urban-Rural Dynamics Hulihall |
14:35 - 14:50 | 463 | Rupak Jha | Assessing vulnerability to water scarcity in Greater Bengaluru Metropolitan Region: identifying changes in rural-urban setting using hotspot mapping |
14:50 - 15:05 | 478 | Sandhya Babel | Understanding the Spatiotemporal Dynamics of Urban Expansion and Water Security in Jaipur City, India, with Reference to the Urban-Rural Continuum |
15:05 - 15:20 | 517 | Sayed Amer Mahmood | Impact of Groundwater Depletion, Land Deformation, and the Urban-Rural Continuum in Lahore: Insights from Sentinel-1 PS InSAR, GRACE, and Borehole Data |
15:20 - 15:45 | --- | All | Group Discussion & Closing |
Session Details
T1 S2a
Moderator: | Victor Shinde |
Date/Time: | 10.10.2024, 11:30 – 13:00 |
Location: | Aula |
T1 S2b
Moderator: | Mukand Babel |
Date/Time: | 11.10.2024, 11:30 – 13:00 |
Location: | Aula |
Description
Urban water demand is expected to increase by 50 to 80 % by 2050, often in regions where irrigation is also being expanded. These trends will intensify competition for water between cities and agriculture. The water supply of around a third of the world's surface water-dependent cities is already at risk due to competition with agricultural users, and this figure is expected to rise by 2040 as urban and agricultural demand continues to grow.
The reallocation of water from rural to urban areas is one of the most important measures to meet the growing demand for freshwater in cities and to cope with the effects of climate change and water quality problems. Reallocation occurs in parallel with the development of new water resources and demand management and is often pursued in conjunction with these measures. Cities often look to neighboring agricultural and rural regions as the main sources of urban water supply after local and cheaper sources are exhausted. The relatively large volumes, often low water use efficiency and low marginal economic productivity of water in agriculture have sparked a growing interest in the reallocation of water resources from rural to urban areas, although the nature of water use and water stress in urban areas is very different. In urban areas, only a small proportion of abstracted water is consumed, creating opportunities for wastewater treatment and reuse.
The redistribution of water from rural to urban areas is associated with different challenges and characteristics that are influenced by urbanization patterns and associated infrastructure and governance arrangements. Inter-basin transfers channel water from distant rural regions to growing cities, a phenomenon referred to as “hydraulic reach”.
This session aims to highlight the problems of interaction between rural and urban water management, identify the problems and discuss possible solutions.
Speaker
T1 S2a
Time | ID | Name | Title |
11:30 - 11:35 | --- | Moderator | Welcome & Introduction |
11:35 - 11:50 | 194 | Kishor Kumar Shrestha | Understanding status of water security and climate risk in a city for designing interventions: A case of Pokhara city, Nepal |
11:50 - 12:05 | 212 | Saiba Gupta | Mainstreaming Circular Economy in Wastewater Management: A Municipal Index for Assessing Urban Local Bodies’ Performance |
12:05 - 12:20 | 235 | Saurav K C | Unlocking Contextualized Groundwater Governance for Advancing Urban Water Security: Cases from the Lower Mekong Region (LMR) |
12:20 - 12:35 | 409 | Nipuna Piyumantha Senaratne | Integrated Management of Water Infrastructure under Climate Risk: A Framework for Holistic Assessment of Climate Resilience of Reservoirs |
12:35 - 13:00 | --- | All | Group Discussion & Closing |
T1 S2b
Time | ID | Name | Title |
11:30 - 11:35 | --- | Moderator | Welcome & Introduction |
11:35 - 11:50 | 401 | Jonathan Quaye | Water Insecurity in Peri-urban Areas: Assessing Health Impacts and the Role of Rainwater Harvesting |
11:50 - 12:05 | 443 | Ifedotun Aina | Hydroeconomic modelling of water scarcity and environmental flows: Evidence from South Africa |
12:05 - 12:20 | 550 | Jan Siemens | Replacing untreated with treated wastewater for irrigation in agriculture: Consequences for antibiotics, metals and nutrients in soils |
12:20 - 12:35 | 561 | Uday Bhonde | Mainstreaming Shallow Aquifers in Integrated Urban-Rural Water Management: A Pilot Research Programme by the Government of India |
12:35 - 13:00 | --- | All | Group Discussion & Closing |