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      Desalinated drinking-water provision in water-stressed regions: challenges of consumer-perception and environmental impact lessons from Antofagasta, Chile

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          The state of desalination and brine production: A global outlook

          Rising water demands and diminishing water supplies are exacerbating water scarcity in most world regions. Conventional approaches relying on rainfall and river runoff in water scarce areas are no longer sufficient to meet human demands. Unconventional water resources, such as desalinated water, are expected to play a key role in narrowing the water demand-supply gap. Our synthesis of desalination data suggests that there are 15,906 operational desalination plants producing around 95 million m3/day of desalinated water for human use, of which 48% is produced in the Middle East and North Africa region. A major challenge associated with desalination technologies is the production of a typically hypersaline concentrate (termed 'brine') discharge that requires disposal, which is both costly and associated with negative environmental impacts. Our estimates reveal brine production to be around 142 million m3/day, approximately 50% greater than previous quantifications. Brine production in Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait and Qatar accounts for 55% of the total global share. Improved brine management strategies are required to limit the negative environmental impacts and reduce the economic cost of disposal, thereby stimulating further developments in desalination facilities to safeguard water supplies for current and future generations.
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            Environmental impact and impact assessment of seawater desalination

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              Exploring the Dimensionality of Trust in Risk Regulation

              This article investigates possible differential levels of trust in government regulation across five different risk contexts and the relationship between a number of concepts that might be thought of as comprising distinctive "dimensions" of trust. It appeared that how people perceive government and its policies toward risk regulation was surprisingly similar for each of the five risk cases. A principal-component analysis showed that the various trust items could best be described by two dimensions: a general trust dimension, which was concerned with a wide range of trust-relevant aspects, such as competence, care, fairness, and openness, and a scepticism component that reflects a sceptical view regarding how risk policies are brought about and enacted. Again, the results were surprisingly similar across the five risk cases, as the same solution was found in each of the different samples. It was also examined whether value similarity has an additional value in predicting trust in risk regulation, compared to the more conventional aspects of trust. Based on the two independent trust factors that were found in this study, a typology of trust is proposed that ranges from full trust to a deep type of distrust. It is argued that for a functioning society it could well be more suitable to have critical but involved citizens in many situations.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                International Journal of Water Resources Development
                International Journal of Water Resources Development
                Informa UK Limited
                0790-0627
                1360-0648
                September 03 2022
                May 30 2021
                September 03 2022
                : 38
                : 5
                : 742-765
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Departamento de Geografía, Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile
                [2 ]Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands
                [3 ]KWR Water Research Institute, Nieuwegein, the Netherlands
                Article
                10.1080/07900627.2021.1898346
                733bfd4d-e287-42c2-8ac5-e955f5d3410b
                © 2022
                History

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