of freshwater used
by individuals, groups or companies in order to make goods or provide services
used by the community. These goods and services may be needed around the entire
world. A water footprint can be determined by math for any well-established
group of users, or producers. It is measured by dividing the total amount of
water used, by the water that became polluted, in the same area during the same
amount of time. While the water footprint of an organization is a good
indicator for its water consumption and pollution, it does not show how other
water sources are affected. More studies will need to be done in order to
determine the effect of the water footprint on water sources.
Etymology The water footprint
concept was introduced in 2002 by A.Y. Hoekstra from UNESCO-IHE as an
alternative indicator of water use.[2]. The concept was refined and accounting
methods were established with a series of publications from two lead authors
A.K. Chapagain and A.Y. Hoekstra from the UNESCO-IHE Institute for Water
Education, now at WWF-UK and University of Twente respectively. The most
elaborate publications on how to estimate water footprints are a 2004-report on
the 'Water footprint of nations' from UNESCO-IHE [3] and the 2008-book
Globalization of Water by A.Y. Hoekstra and A.K. Chapagain, published by
Blackwell, 2008. Cooperation between global leading institutions in the field
has led to the establishment of the Water Footprint Network in 2008 that aims
to coordinate efforts to further develop and disseminate knowledge on water
footprint concepts, methods and tools.
No comments:
Post a Comment