
Tapping the Oceans
Seawater Desalination and the Political Ecology of Water
Edward Elgar Publishing
Published on 30. November 2018
Book
Hardback
208 pages
978-1-78811-380-9 (ISBN)
Description
Tapping the Oceans provides a detailed analysis of the political and ecological debates facing water desalination in the twenty-first century.
Water supplies for cities around the world are undergoing profound geographical, technological and political transformations. Increasingly, water-stressed cities are looking to the oceans to fix unreliable, contested and over-burdened water supply systems. Yet the use of emerging desalination technologies is accompanied by intense debates on their economic cost, governance, environmental impact and poses wider questions for the sustainable and just provision of urban water. Through a series of cutting-edge case studies and multi-subject approaches, this book explores the perspectives, disputes and politics surrounding water desalination on a broad geographical scale.
As the first book of its kind, this unique work will appeal to those researching water and infrastructure issues in the fields of political ecology, geography, environmental science and sustainability. Industry and water managers who wish to understand the political debates around desalination technology more fully will also find this an informative read.
Contributors include: E. Feitelson, M. Fragkou, S. Gorostiza, A. Loftus, H. March, J. McEvoy, D. Pavon Gamero, D. Sauri, A. Scheba, S. Scheba, E. Swyngedouw, M. Usher, J. Williams
Water supplies for cities around the world are undergoing profound geographical, technological and political transformations. Increasingly, water-stressed cities are looking to the oceans to fix unreliable, contested and over-burdened water supply systems. Yet the use of emerging desalination technologies is accompanied by intense debates on their economic cost, governance, environmental impact and poses wider questions for the sustainable and just provision of urban water. Through a series of cutting-edge case studies and multi-subject approaches, this book explores the perspectives, disputes and politics surrounding water desalination on a broad geographical scale.
As the first book of its kind, this unique work will appeal to those researching water and infrastructure issues in the fields of political ecology, geography, environmental science and sustainability. Industry and water managers who wish to understand the political debates around desalination technology more fully will also find this an informative read.
Contributors include: E. Feitelson, M. Fragkou, S. Gorostiza, A. Loftus, H. March, J. McEvoy, D. Pavon Gamero, D. Sauri, A. Scheba, S. Scheba, E. Swyngedouw, M. Usher, J. Williams
Reviews / Votes
'This very timely book provides an excellent and insightful introduction to the entanglements of water, salt, power, and capital in the emergence of an alleged environmentally friendly and cornucopian solution to increasing water scarcity. It helps decipher how desalination is fast becoming the last frontier of capital accumulation for both the water industry and financiers, and how it reconfigures existing socio-ecologies in profound and subtle ways.'--Francois Molle, Institut de Recherche pour le Developpement (IRD), France
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Cheltenham
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-78811-380-9 (9781788113809)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Edited by Joe Williams, University of Bristol and Erik Swyngedouw, Professor of Geography, School of Environment, Education and Development, University of Manchester, UK
Content
Contents:
1. Mobilising the oceans to quench our thirst
Joe Williams and Erik Swyngedouw
2. Wet dreams with a grain of salt: Desalination in Spain's water policy
David Saur?, Santiago Gorostiza and David Pavon
3. Water Governance and Desalination in Baja California Sur, Mexico
Jamie McEvoy
4. On the Implications of Seawater Desalination: Some Insights from the Israeli Case
Eran Feitelson
5. Disclosing water inequalities at the household level under desalination water provision; the case of Antofagasta, Chile
Maria Christina Fragkou
6. Desalination as emergency fix: Tracing the drought-desalination assemblage in South Africa
Suraya Scheba and Andreas Scheba
7. Worlding via water: Desalination, cluster development and the 'stickiness' of commodities
Mark Usher
8. Financialising desalination in London: The Thames Desalination Plant (TWDP)
Alex Loftus and Hug March
9. Commodifying the Pacific Ocean: Desalination and the neoliberalisation of water in Southern California
Joe Williams
10. Politicizing the salt of the seas
Erik Swyngedouw and Joe Williams
Index
1. Mobilising the oceans to quench our thirst
Joe Williams and Erik Swyngedouw
2. Wet dreams with a grain of salt: Desalination in Spain's water policy
David Saur?, Santiago Gorostiza and David Pavon
3. Water Governance and Desalination in Baja California Sur, Mexico
Jamie McEvoy
4. On the Implications of Seawater Desalination: Some Insights from the Israeli Case
Eran Feitelson
5. Disclosing water inequalities at the household level under desalination water provision; the case of Antofagasta, Chile
Maria Christina Fragkou
6. Desalination as emergency fix: Tracing the drought-desalination assemblage in South Africa
Suraya Scheba and Andreas Scheba
7. Worlding via water: Desalination, cluster development and the 'stickiness' of commodities
Mark Usher
8. Financialising desalination in London: The Thames Desalination Plant (TWDP)
Alex Loftus and Hug March
9. Commodifying the Pacific Ocean: Desalination and the neoliberalisation of water in Southern California
Joe Williams
10. Politicizing the salt of the seas
Erik Swyngedouw and Joe Williams
Index