Endogenous technological and population change under increasing water scarcity

Ancient civilizations may have dispersed or collapsed under extreme dry conditions. There are indications that the same may hold for modern societies. However, hydroclimatic change cannot be the sole predictor of the fate of contemporary societies in water-scarce regions. This paper focuses on techn...

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Main Authors: S. Pande, M. Ertsen, M. Sivapalan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2014-08-01
Series:Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
Online Access:http://www.hydrol-earth-syst-sci.net/18/3239/2014/hess-18-3239-2014.pdf
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spelling doaj-b97031494a214669bc28c3b1ec0e94052020-11-24T22:24:00ZengCopernicus PublicationsHydrology and Earth System Sciences1027-56061607-79382014-08-011883239325810.5194/hess-18-3239-2014Endogenous technological and population change under increasing water scarcityS. Pande0M. Ertsen1M. Sivapalan2Department of Water Management, Delft University of Technology, Delft, the NetherlandsDepartment of Water Management, Delft University of Technology, Delft, the NetherlandsDepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Department of Geography, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, IL, USAAncient civilizations may have dispersed or collapsed under extreme dry conditions. There are indications that the same may hold for modern societies. However, hydroclimatic change cannot be the sole predictor of the fate of contemporary societies in water-scarce regions. This paper focuses on technological change as a factor that may ameliorate the effects of increasing water scarcity and as such counter the effects of hydroclimatic changes. We study the role of technological change on the dynamics of coupled human–water systems, and model technological change as an endogenous process that depends on many factors intrinsic to coupled human–water dynamics. We do not treat technology as an exogenous random sequence of events, but assume that it results from societal actions. <br><br> While the proposed model is a rather simple model of a coupled human–water system, it is shown to be capable of replicating patterns of technological, population, production and consumption per capita changes. The model demonstrates that technological change may indeed ameliorate the effects of increasing water scarcity, but typically it does so only to a certain extent. In general we find that endogenous technology change under increasing water scarcity helps to delay the peak of population size before it inevitably starts to decline. We also analyze the case when water remains constant over time and find that co-evolutionary trajectories can never grow at a constant rate; rather the rate itself grows with time. Thus our model does not predict a co-evolutionary trajectory of a socio-hydrological system where technological innovation harmoniously provides for a growing population. It allows either for an explosion or an eventual dispersal of population. The latter occurs only under increasing water scarcity. As a result, we draw the conclusion that declining consumption per capita despite technological advancement and increase in aggregate production may serve as a useful predictor of upcoming decline in contemporary societies in water-scarce basins.http://www.hydrol-earth-syst-sci.net/18/3239/2014/hess-18-3239-2014.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S. Pande
M. Ertsen
M. Sivapalan
spellingShingle S. Pande
M. Ertsen
M. Sivapalan
Endogenous technological and population change under increasing water scarcity
Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
author_facet S. Pande
M. Ertsen
M. Sivapalan
author_sort S. Pande
title Endogenous technological and population change under increasing water scarcity
title_short Endogenous technological and population change under increasing water scarcity
title_full Endogenous technological and population change under increasing water scarcity
title_fullStr Endogenous technological and population change under increasing water scarcity
title_full_unstemmed Endogenous technological and population change under increasing water scarcity
title_sort endogenous technological and population change under increasing water scarcity
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
issn 1027-5606
1607-7938
publishDate 2014-08-01
description Ancient civilizations may have dispersed or collapsed under extreme dry conditions. There are indications that the same may hold for modern societies. However, hydroclimatic change cannot be the sole predictor of the fate of contemporary societies in water-scarce regions. This paper focuses on technological change as a factor that may ameliorate the effects of increasing water scarcity and as such counter the effects of hydroclimatic changes. We study the role of technological change on the dynamics of coupled human–water systems, and model technological change as an endogenous process that depends on many factors intrinsic to coupled human–water dynamics. We do not treat technology as an exogenous random sequence of events, but assume that it results from societal actions. <br><br> While the proposed model is a rather simple model of a coupled human–water system, it is shown to be capable of replicating patterns of technological, population, production and consumption per capita changes. The model demonstrates that technological change may indeed ameliorate the effects of increasing water scarcity, but typically it does so only to a certain extent. In general we find that endogenous technology change under increasing water scarcity helps to delay the peak of population size before it inevitably starts to decline. We also analyze the case when water remains constant over time and find that co-evolutionary trajectories can never grow at a constant rate; rather the rate itself grows with time. Thus our model does not predict a co-evolutionary trajectory of a socio-hydrological system where technological innovation harmoniously provides for a growing population. It allows either for an explosion or an eventual dispersal of population. The latter occurs only under increasing water scarcity. As a result, we draw the conclusion that declining consumption per capita despite technological advancement and increase in aggregate production may serve as a useful predictor of upcoming decline in contemporary societies in water-scarce basins.
url http://www.hydrol-earth-syst-sci.net/18/3239/2014/hess-18-3239-2014.pdf
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