TY - JOUR
T1 - Water Sensitive Cities Index
T2 - A diagnostic tool to assess water sensitivity and guide management actions
AU - Rogers, B. C.
AU - Dunn, G.
AU - Hammer, K.
AU - Novalia, W.
AU - de Haan, F. J.
AU - Brown, L.
AU - Brown, R. R.
AU - Lloyd, S.
AU - Urich, C.
AU - Wong, T. H.F.
AU - Chesterfield, C.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020
PY - 2020/9/9
Y1 - 2020/9/9
N2 - Cities are wrestling with the practical challenges of transitioning urban water services to become water sensitive; capable of enhancing liveability, sustainability, resilience and productivity in the face of climate change, rapid urbanisation, degraded ecosystems and ageing infrastructure. Indicators can be valuable for guiding actions for improvement, but there is not yet an established index that measures the full suite of attributes that constitute water sensitive performance. This paper therefore presents the Water Sensitive Cities (WSC) Index, a new benchmarking and diagnostic tool to assess the water sensitivity of a municipal or metropolitan city, set aspirational targets and inform management responses to improve water sensitive practices. Its 34 indicators are organised into seven goals: ensure good water sensitive governance, increase community capital, achieve equity of essential services, improve productivity and resource efficiency, improve ecological health, ensure quality urban spaces, and promote adaptive infrastructure. The WSC Index design is a quantitative framework based on qualitative rating descriptions and a participatory assessment methodology, enabling local contextual interpretations of the indicators while maintaining a robust universal framework for city comparison and benchmarking. The paper demonstrates its application on three illustrative cases. Rapid uptake of the WSC Index in Australia highlights its value in helping stakeholders develop collective commitment and evidence-based priorities for action to accelerate their city's water sensitive transition. Early testing in cities in Asia, the Pacific and South Africa has also showed the potential of the WSC Index internationally.
AB - Cities are wrestling with the practical challenges of transitioning urban water services to become water sensitive; capable of enhancing liveability, sustainability, resilience and productivity in the face of climate change, rapid urbanisation, degraded ecosystems and ageing infrastructure. Indicators can be valuable for guiding actions for improvement, but there is not yet an established index that measures the full suite of attributes that constitute water sensitive performance. This paper therefore presents the Water Sensitive Cities (WSC) Index, a new benchmarking and diagnostic tool to assess the water sensitivity of a municipal or metropolitan city, set aspirational targets and inform management responses to improve water sensitive practices. Its 34 indicators are organised into seven goals: ensure good water sensitive governance, increase community capital, achieve equity of essential services, improve productivity and resource efficiency, improve ecological health, ensure quality urban spaces, and promote adaptive infrastructure. The WSC Index design is a quantitative framework based on qualitative rating descriptions and a participatory assessment methodology, enabling local contextual interpretations of the indicators while maintaining a robust universal framework for city comparison and benchmarking. The paper demonstrates its application on three illustrative cases. Rapid uptake of the WSC Index in Australia highlights its value in helping stakeholders develop collective commitment and evidence-based priorities for action to accelerate their city's water sensitive transition. Early testing in cities in Asia, the Pacific and South Africa has also showed the potential of the WSC Index internationally.
KW - Benchmarking
KW - Integrated water management
KW - Nature-based solutions
KW - Performance indicators
KW - Sustainability assessment
KW - Transitions
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85090951954&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.watres.2020.116411
DO - 10.1016/j.watres.2020.116411
M3 - Article
C2 - 32949887
AN - SCOPUS:85090951954
SN - 0043-1354
VL - 186
JO - Water Research
JF - Water Research
M1 - 116411
ER -