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Soft water path


The concept of the soft path was first used for energy resource management and was developed by Amory Lovins shortly after the shock of the 1973 energy crisis in the United States. This concept has now been refined and applied to water, most notably by water expert Peter Gleick and David Brooks. The soft path is often framed as a more integrated and effective alternative to supply-side water resource management. Supply-side water management focuses on meeting demands for water through centralized, large-scale physical infrastructure, and centralized water management systems. In the 20th century, this approach focused on constructing bigger dams and drilling deeper wells to access more water to meet projected demands of consumers. More recently, a focus on demand-side management has emerged in regions where water supply is increasingly constrained (see, for example, Peak water), and it focuses on managing demand and making current practices more efficient. The soft path integrates both supply and demand concepts but in a broader context by recognizing that water is a means to satisfy demands for goods and services and asking how much water, of what qualities, is actually required to satisfy those demands efficiently and sustainably. Soft path water planning also requires broader institutional approaches to water management including the application of smart economics, the potential for distributed rather than centralized water systems, and more democratic participation in water policy decisions. Others have described the soft path as "unleashing the full potential of demand-side management.",

Critics of the soft water path argue that we cannot conserve enough to provide for an ever-growing population. Conservation for cities that get their water from storage, either a dam or water tanks, is great but it only gets us a little more water. And the reported amounts of water conserved by some cities is misleading. A January 15, 2015, article in the Sacramento Bee reported that the Sacramento region cut its water use 25.6% in November 2014 compared to 2013. Sacramento does not get its water directly from any water storage. Sacramento gets its water from the Sacramento and American Rivers. The water is already in the rivers, it is going to the ocean. If the water is not used, it is not saved. If you do use the water inside your home the water goes down a drain and ends up at a sewage treatment plant where it is treated and goes back into the river. If you use the water outside your home the water goes into the ground and helps replenish central valley groundwater stores that have been depleted partly because of the extreme water restrictions. The amount of water that is released into the Sacramento and American Rivers is not based on down river use, it is based upon the amount of water in storage.


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