As the world enters a new phase of climate change, access to clean water has become a crucial issue.
A report published Tuesday (“Achieving Equitable, Climate-Resilient Water and Sanitation for Frontline Communities”) identifies ways that historically neglected communities most vulnerable to a rapidly changing global climate can create resilient water and wastewater systems.
“To achieve the human right to water and sanitation, five essential components of water and sanitation services must be met — water and sanitation access must be sufficient, safe, acceptable, physically accessible, and affordable,” the report said. “Yet climate change is already making it more difficult to meet these requirements.”
Its highlights include nature-based solutions, tailoring approaches to each community and using technology — all the while recognizing barriers to implementing them.
“What we hope to do with this report, what I hope, is that it actually gives people hope,” said Shannon McNeeley, a report author and senior researcher with the Pacific Institute, which published the report with DigDeep and the Center for Water Security and Cooperation.
“In spite of some of the major federal funding sources becoming uncertain and possibly not available, I think people will find other ways.”
Climate and the Trump administration
Malynndra Tome was helping to map livestock ponds in the Navajo Nation when she saw something that inspired her to act. An elderly woman was filling milk jugs with water at the back of a gas station in the Native American reservation, where about 30% of people live without running water.
“How can we be living in the United States of America … one of the most powerful countries in the world, and people are living like this here?” asked Tome, a citizen who grew up in the community of Ganado, Arizona, in the nation’s largest reservation at 27,000 square miles in Arizona, New Mexico and Utah.
Weather extremes made worse by climate change have further disrupted people’s access to water.
In January, several water providers declared their drinking water unsafe after wildfires roared through Los Angeles.
One utility in Pasadena, California, sent out its first notice since it began serving water more than a century ago.
Aging water systems leak trillions of gallons, leaving residents in some of the country’s poorest communities with a substantial financial burden to fix them.
An estimated 30% of the population in the Navajo Nation lives in homes that don’t have running water, and many residents drive long distances to get water from public spigots, according to the Navajo Nation Department of Water Resources and the Natural Resources Defense Council.
The report also notes that some federal resources and funding have become unavailable since Donald Trumpreturned to the White House. The Trump administration has cut or paused funding for critical water infrastructureprojects, touted a reversal of diversity, equity and inclusion policies, and eliminated environmental justice policies meant to protect the communities the report centers on.
Greg Pierce, director of the Human Right to Water Solutions Lab at the University of California, Los Angeles, said the report “comes at a very depressing moment where we’re not going to see federal action in this space, it doesn’t seem, for the next four years.”
Solutions come with challenges
The report synthesizes existing literature about water, climate change and solutions. Its authors reviewed academic studies, government and private reports and interviewed experts to identify ways low-income and communities of color can build water and wastewater systems to withstand extreme weather.
“Water systems that rely on a single source are highly vulnerable to extreme weather and climate events because they lack backup options if their supplies become contaminated, unavailable from drought, or if they become physically disconnected due to damaged infrastructure,” the report noted.
However, building a physical connection to another drinking water supply can help prevent disruptions from unexpected or extreme events for both communities. Sharing systems can also built new communities.
“Physical connections created between two or more water systems are referred to as a consolidation, because often the systems end up creating a shared governance structure that makes them a single water system,” the report said.
The report also highlights technology like rainwater harvesting and gray water reuse systems that can decrease water demand and increase resilience to drought. But it adds that implementing and maintaining technology like it can be too expensive for poorer communities.
The report also advocates nature-based solutions such as wetlands, which studies find can reduce the length and severity of droughts, provide flood control, reduce or remove pollutants in water and protect water supplies. Communities across the country are increasingly recognizing the benefits of wetlands. In Florida’s Everglades, for example, officials have spent billions of dollars to build engineered wetlands that clean and protect a vital drinking water source.
The report argues for government-funded water assistance programs to help poorer households pay water and sewer bills, like the Low Income Household Water Assistance Program launched during at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Benefiting communities
Gregory Moller, a professor in the soil and water systems department at the University of Idaho, notes that some approaches are too complex and expensive for smaller or poorer communities. “Our innovations also have to be on a scale and stage that is adaptable to small systems,” he said. “And that’s where I think some of the most serious challenges are.”
Some solutions the report highlights are benefiting communities. In the Navajo Nation, hundreds of solar-powered home water systems have brought running water to more than 2,000 people. Kimberly Lemme, an executive director at DigDeep, which is installing the systems, said it can be a complex and lengthy process. But it shows that solutions do exist.
“Water is a basic human right,” said Tome, whose encounter with the elderly woman inspired her to pursue a doctorate in water resources. “And in order for people to live productively, to have healthy lives, I think water is a big part of that.”
Associated Press contributed to this report.
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