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Water Security and the Hydric Potential of Andean Cryosphere.
  • Sebastian Ruiz Pereira,
  • Fabrice Lambert
Sebastian Ruiz Pereira
Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Fabrice Lambert
Pontifical Catholic University of Chile
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Abstract

In dry regions, millions of people depend on freshwater provided by the mountain cryosphere. Its likely depletion would make productive land-use management and access to water supply an even more urgent priority. Therefore water-security-oriented policies increasingly rely on solid information feedbacks for projections provided by Earth Sciences. Nevertheless, this type of research still has a lot to understand regarding headwater catchment hydrology, the top global “water towers.” For example, there are many theoretical and logistical uncertainties: “data deserts” in isolated areas, outdated legislation, or scarce research funding. Yet, one more important issue to highlight is the evolving nature of hydric resources, particularly where baselines have a large uncertainty and supply to many as in dry regions in the Andes or the Himalayas. The main concern here is the legislative inadequacy for evolving hydric resources as their baselines change. For example, groundwater within transboundary or paleowater aquifers could have unaccounted climate-sensitive recharge sources (e.g., permafrost thaw). Hence, the specific way of legislating mountain groundwater could turn ambiguous and useless. By reviewing particular legislation and landing the discussion on study cases in mountainous areas, we commit to showing the inadequacy of current legislation on hydric-potential evolution. Overall, water-security-oriented legislation will not assess and protect headwater catchments within the spectrum of different recharge processes throughout different hydroclimatic zones. First, the “evolving value” of specific catchments changes the nominal priority and purpose for protection. Secondly, a consistent failure to assess incommensurable (latent), climate-sensitive fractions of water supply structure is also found. Therefore, the policy recommendation is to use a hydric scale absorbing all nested processes necessary for hydric supply to persist, requiring defining a lifespan for legislation.