Troubled Waters
Confronting the Water Crisis in Australia’s Cities
Edited by: Patrick TroyPlease read Conditions of use before downloading the formats.
Description
Australian cities have traditionally relied for their water on a ‘predict-and-provide’ philosophy that gives primacy to big engineering solutions. In more recent years privatised water authorities, seeking to maximise consumption and profits, have reinforced the emphasis on increasing supply. Now the cities must cope with the stresses these policies have imposed on the eco-systems from which they harvest water, into which they discharge wastes, and on which they are located. Residents are having to pay more for their water, while the cities themselves are becoming less sustainable.
Must we build more dams and desalination plants, or should we be managing the demand for urban water more prudently? This book explores the demand for urban water and how it has changed in response to shifting social mores over the past century. It explains how demand for centralised provision of water might be reshaped to enable the cities to better cope with expected changes in supply as our climate changes. And it discusses the implications of property rights in water for proposals to privatise water services.
Details
- ISBN (print):
- 9781921313837
- ISBN (online):
- 9781921313844
- Publication date:
- Jun 2008
- Imprint:
- ANU Press
- DOI:
- http://doi.org/10.22459/TW.06.2008
- Disciplines:
- Science: Environmental Sciences
- Countries:
- Australia
PDF Chapters
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- Preliminary Pages (PDF, 452KB)
- Contributors (PDF, 74KB)
- Acknowledgments (PDF, 81KB)
- Introduction: The water services problem (PDF, 110KB) – Patrick Troy
- The life and times of the Chadwickian solution (PDF, 128KB) – Tony Dingle doi
- The water crisis in Southeast Queensland: How desalination turned the region into carbon emission heaven (PDF, 1.2MB) – Peter Spearritt doi
- Down the gurgler: Historical influences on Australian domestic water consumption (PDF, 4.2MB) – Graeme Davison doi
- Nature, networks and desire: Changing cultures of water in Australia (PDF, 135KB) – Lesley Head doi
- Urban water: Policy, institutions and government (PDF, 142KB) – Steve Dovers doi
- Sustainability in urban water futures (PDF, 373KB) – Geoff Syme doi
- Exploiting the unspeakable: Third-party access to sewage and public-sector sewerage infrastructure (PDF, 223KB) – Janice Gray and Alex Gardner doi
- Property in urban water: Private rights and public governance (PDF, 170KB) – Lee Godden doi
- Conclusion: A new solution (PDF, 191KB) – Patrick Troy
- Index (PDF, 203KB)
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