Current:Home > InvestSwimming pools and lavish gardens of the rich are driving water shortages, study says -Wealth Pursuit Network
Swimming pools and lavish gardens of the rich are driving water shortages, study says
View
Date:2025-04-14 07:40:57
Swimming pools, flower gardens, indoor fountains — and the urbanites who can afford them — are big factors behind the increasingly dire water crises plaguing cities, an international research team says.
Published in the journal Nature Sustainability, a new study found socioeconomic disparity to be just as influential as climate change and population growth when it comes to explaining why the water supply in so many cities is shrinking.
"There are certain individuals with the power to decide how to manage water who also use more water," said lead researcher Elisa Savelli of Uppsala University in Sweden. "Even with something as simple as water, it's unjust. Some social groups have access to too much, and some social groups have too little."
Wealthy residents use 12 times more water than those with lower incomes, study found
More than 80 metropolitan areas around the world have faced severe shortages in the last two decades, a figure that's only projected to rise, impacting more than one billion people in the next few decades.
And the threat doesn't discriminate between hemispheres or climates. Moscow, Miami and Melbourne, Australia, were among the most impacted in the last decade.
For the purposes of the study, researchers zeroed in on just one location, Cape Town, South Africa.
Even 25 years after South Africa's apartheid ended, Cape Town is still segregated in distinct geographic lines, making it easier to track water usage among income groups, Savelli said. The city also experienced a major drought from 2015 to 2017, a crisis so severe that the city narrowly averted "Day Zero," when it believed water sources would dry up entirely.
In the same time period, Cape Town's elite households consumed roughly 571 gallons of water daily, compared with 47 gallons for households in lower income brackets, the researchers found.
Despite only representing about 14% of the population, the wealthiest residents used more than half of the water (51%) consumed by the entire city.
And most of the water used by those privileged social groups went for nonessential needs, such as irrigation, swimming pools and water fixtures. Other social groups used the most water for basic functions like drinking or bathing.
"Even though we used Cape Town as a case study, the analysis can be applied to every other city in the world that's facing water shortages, or that might face them in the future," Savelli told NPR.
"I won't say that the results will be exactly the same, but I believe that any city — in the U.S., Canada, or Australia — would have inequality. It might manifest in different ways, but it's still there and it's just as critical as population growth or climate change," she said.
Another notable limitation of the study is its scope: Domestic water consumption accounts for just a fraction of overall public water use.
In the U.S., two major industries — thermoelectric power production and manufacturing — account for two-thirds of public water supply usage. Agriculture accounts for roughly 40% of America's total freshwater withdrawals.
But Savelli hopes that the study will spark a much-needed change in the way policymakers rethink urban policy.
Effective policy might involve trade-offs and targeted measures
In the face of drought, cities often seek to implement progressive pricing models or infrastructure updates, bureaucratic measures that often just perpetuate the same "uneven and unsustainable water patterns" that led to the crisis in the first place, the study says.
During Cape Town's severe drought, wealthy residents turned to private water sources like boreholes and rainwater harvesting systems, the study says. Low-income residents, facing higher water costs, sometimes went without enough water to meet basic demands for activities like cooking and laundry.
In other words, the drought made the wealthy more water secure and better equipped to face future droughts, even though they were consuming unsustainable amounts of water in the first place.
Savelli says policymakers should think in terms of targeted solutions and trade-offs.
"Before building an additional dam, cities should look at individual consumption first, not just the [citywide] average," she said. "Maybe you have a swimming pool, but you don't keep the water in all the time or the government could tax you for water usage that it deems excessive."
It's hard to imagine solutions like fines and restrictions being immediately effective in places like the U.S.
Take for example Los Angeles, a city with an infamous lack of groundwater sources. In 2022, celebrities including Kim Kardashian, Kevin Hart and Sylvester Stallone were called out for blatantly flouting fines and "notices of exceedance" for their drought-era water usage.
"For the celebrities or musicians or athletes who all live in the area, monetary penalties are going to be meaningless to them because it doesn't matter. They have plenty of money and if they want to, they could spend $5,000 a month on a water bill," said Mike McNutt, a spokesman for the local water district.
After increasing frustration, the district took the infrastructure route after all, installing automatic flow restriction devices capable of turning lawns brown and reducing even Kardashian's Instagram-famous sink faucet to a mere trickle.
veryGood! (8349)
Related
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- University of Kentucky cancer center achieves highest designation from National Cancer Institute
- Seattle cop under international scrutiny defends jokes after woman's death
- Prince Harry Is Royally Flushed After His Invictus Family Sings Happy Birthday to Him
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Happy birthday, Prince Harry! Duchess Meghan, fans celebrate at Invictus Games: Watch
- Georgia religious group abused, starved woman to death, authorities say
- New Vegas Strip resort will permit its hospitality staff to decide whether they want to form a union
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- A pediatrician's view on child poverty rates: 'I need policymakers to do their job'
Ranking
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- Wagner Group designated as terrorist organization by UK officials
- Hollywood relies on China to stay afloat. What does that mean for movies?
- Lil Guy, a Florida alligator missing his top jaw, rescued after finding online fame
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- IMF warns Lebanon that the country is still facing enormous challenges, years after a meltdown began
- Riverdale’s Lili Reinhart Shares Update on her “Crazy” Body Dysmorphia and OCD Struggles
- Man convicted of bomb threat outside Library of Congress sentenced to probation after year in jail
Recommendation
Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
Remains exhumed from a Tulsa cemetery as the search for 1921 Race Massacre victims has resumed
What’s behind the surge in migrant arrivals to Italy?
Aaron Rodgers' season-ending injury reignites NFL players' furor over turf
In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
They worked for years in Libya. Now an Egyptian village mourns scores of its men killed in flooding
Maui wildfire death toll drops to 97 from 115, authorities say
Philadelphia native and Eagles RB D'Andre Swift has career game vs. Vikings