A multi reference point based index to assess and monitor European water policies from a sustainability approach
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Water sustainability Multi-reference methodology Europe Governance
Date
2022-09-24Referencia bibliográfica
M. de Castro-Pardo et al. A multi reference point based index to assess and monitor European water policies from a sustainability approach. Socio-Economic Planning Sciences 89 (2023) 101433[https://doi.org/10.1016/j.seps.2022.101433]
Sponsorship
Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (Project PID2019-104263RB-C42),; The Regional Government of Andalucía (Project P18-RT-1566),; EU ERDF operative program (Project UMA18-FEDERJA-065)Abstract
The scarcity of water resources is a serious problem that concerns governments and international institutions.
The importance of water resources and the expectations of billions of people with serious water shortages and
subsequent food shortages have made European water policy makers focus all their attention on the sustainability
of water as a resource. In this paper we propose a new Water Sustainability Indicator based on a Multi-
Reference methodology (WSI-MR) which permits modeling compensation between the analyzed criteria and
provides a participative approach. The WSI-MR provides results based on 19 variables grouped into 5 dimensions:
availability, access, resilience, good governance and economic capacity. The indicator was applied to
assess water sustainability in 27 European countries. The results showed that Finland, the Netherlands, Sweden
and the United Kingdom obtained the best global results in terms of weak water (compensatory) sustainability.
Using a non-compensatory approach, no country gained acceptable results in terms of strong sustainability. Some
subdimensions related to climate change and the state of freshwater resources were detected as especially
vulnerable in all the analyzed countries. Finally, the study identified some eastern European countries with low
GDP and good performance of availability and cost of water, where bad results in terms of governance and water
productivity could jeopardize water sustainability in the event of a potential economic development, if these
limitations are not addressed. In a context of economic and political instability, due to the current armed conflict
in nearby countries such as Ukraine, it is especially important to pay attention to these countries, whose good
governance indicators could worsen even more. The proposed indicator is useful to identify warning signs and
can contribute to the improvement in decision-making processes and to monitoring international water policies.