Trans-boundary variations of urban drought vulnerability and its impact on water resource management in Singapore and Johor, Malaysia
Low-latitude areas generally experience relatively large precipitation totals, but droughts/dry spells do occur periodically and are potentially hazardous in these regions - especially within rapidly developing urban settlements. These areas typically have high water demand and therefore may potenti...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1067692020-09-26T21:59:02Z Trans-boundary variations of urban drought vulnerability and its impact on water resource management in Singapore and Johor, Malaysia Chuah, Chong Joon Ho, Beatrice H. Chow, Winston T. L. Nanyang Environment and Water Research Institute Urban Vulnerability Drought Engineering::Environmental engineering Low-latitude areas generally experience relatively large precipitation totals, but droughts/dry spells do occur periodically and are potentially hazardous in these regions - especially within rapidly developing urban settlements. These areas typically have high water demand and therefore may potentially be subjected to water scarcity. Effective local water resource management lowering risks and vulnerabilities to drought is thus paramount, and these policies may be affected in regions with national borders sharing a common transboundary water resource. In this study, we (a) quantify and identify drought episodes using the Palmer Drought Severity Index in the neighbouring equatorial regions of Singapore and Johor, Malaysia, and (b) qualitatively examine each region's drought impacts and consequent responses through archival research over the past fifty years. The data indicate that both frequencies and intensities of drought episodes in both Singapore and Johor have increased over time, suggesting greater exposure to this hazard. However, there are distinct variations in drought impacts in Singapore and Johor, and how each region addresses water resource management to drought with varying degrees of success. Despite the close geographical proximity, significant variations in regional adaptive capacities suggest that different drought vulnerabilities exist. We discuss the efficacy of drought responses over different time scales, and suggest that a combination of demand- and supply-side policies, especially in the long-term, should be considered to reduce vulnerability to this hazard. Published version 2019-06-27T04:14:32Z 2019-12-06T22:18:03Z 2019-06-27T04:14:32Z 2019-12-06T22:18:03Z 2018 Journal Article Chuah, C. J., Ho, B. H., & Chow, W. T. L. (2018). Trans-boundary variations of urban drought vulnerability and its impact on water resource management in Singapore and Johor, Malaysia. Environmental Research Letters, 13(7), 074011-. doi:10.1088/1748-9326/aacad8 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/106769 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/48976 10.1088/1748-9326/aacad8 en Environmental Research Letters © 2018 The Author(s) (Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd). Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI. 15 p. application/pdf |
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Urban Vulnerability Drought Engineering::Environmental engineering Chuah, Chong Joon Ho, Beatrice H. Chow, Winston T. L. Trans-boundary variations of urban drought vulnerability and its impact on water resource management in Singapore and Johor, Malaysia |
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Low-latitude areas generally experience relatively large precipitation totals, but droughts/dry spells do occur periodically and are potentially hazardous in these regions - especially within rapidly developing urban settlements. These areas typically have high water demand and therefore may potentially be subjected to water scarcity. Effective local water resource management lowering risks and vulnerabilities to drought is thus paramount, and these policies may be affected in regions with national borders sharing a common transboundary water resource. In this study, we (a) quantify and identify drought episodes using the Palmer Drought Severity Index in the neighbouring equatorial regions of Singapore and Johor, Malaysia, and (b) qualitatively examine each region's drought impacts and consequent responses through archival research over the past fifty years. The data indicate that both frequencies and intensities of drought episodes in both Singapore and Johor have increased over time, suggesting greater exposure to this hazard. However, there are distinct variations in drought impacts in Singapore and Johor, and how each region addresses water resource management to drought with varying degrees of success. Despite the close geographical proximity, significant variations in regional adaptive capacities suggest that different drought vulnerabilities exist. We discuss the efficacy of drought responses over different time scales, and suggest that a combination of demand- and supply-side policies, especially in the long-term, should be considered to reduce vulnerability to this hazard. |
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Nanyang Environment and Water Research Institute |
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Nanyang Environment and Water Research Institute Chuah, Chong Joon Ho, Beatrice H. Chow, Winston T. L. |
format |
Article |
author |
Chuah, Chong Joon Ho, Beatrice H. Chow, Winston T. L. |
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Chuah, Chong Joon |
title |
Trans-boundary variations of urban drought vulnerability and its impact on water resource management in Singapore and Johor, Malaysia |
title_short |
Trans-boundary variations of urban drought vulnerability and its impact on water resource management in Singapore and Johor, Malaysia |
title_full |
Trans-boundary variations of urban drought vulnerability and its impact on water resource management in Singapore and Johor, Malaysia |
title_fullStr |
Trans-boundary variations of urban drought vulnerability and its impact on water resource management in Singapore and Johor, Malaysia |
title_full_unstemmed |
Trans-boundary variations of urban drought vulnerability and its impact on water resource management in Singapore and Johor, Malaysia |
title_sort |
trans-boundary variations of urban drought vulnerability and its impact on water resource management in singapore and johor, malaysia |
publishDate |
2019 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/106769 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/48976 |
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1681057047408279552 |