Water One Water Management managers and stakeholder groups working together to build trust can define potential advantages of regional planning, including: Strategy For Improving cost savings from shared infrastructure; equitable distribution of risks and benefits; Sustainability flexibility matching supply and demand; and the availability of state and federal funding; all while broadening partici. [...] Adopting integrated or “one water” management that utilizes all Sustainability goals encourage long-term available water sources to achieve more sustainable supplies has planning, but efforts must also consider the limitations of data and the tradeoffs between benefits for cities, agriculture and the environment. [...] The development of Monterey’s integrated water management network and the deployment of key innovations allowed this network to more effectively serve the area’s agricultural and residential communities. [...] While the network’s success in leveraging local needs and regional partnerships through inclusion of diverse stakeholders, ABOUT THE AUTHORS permitted the development of effective integrated water solutions. [...] Engineering Research Center for Re-inventing the Nation’s Urban Water Infrastructure Although the Monterey region has demonstrated great progress in (ReNUWIt) and affiliate of the leveraging collaborative water projects to satisfy agricultural and Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment at Stanford urban needs, the future direction of the region’s water supply is University.
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