Water reuse in the management of island water resources: The case of the Canary Islands and the Region of Madeira. Delgado, S., Rodríguez-Gómez, L., Vera, L., Álvarez, M., Díaz, F., & Rodríguez-Sevilla, J. Journal of Water Supply: Research and Technology - AQUA, 61(8):484–493, 2012.
Water reuse in the management of island water resources: The case of the Canary Islands and the Region of Madeira [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
The integrated management of water resources has taken on great importance in recent years, especially in insular environments such as the Canary Islands and Madeira, which share geological, environmental, and economic characteristics. Nowadays, due to over-exploitation of aquifers, most of these islands cannot meet their water demand with the traditional resources, forcing their water authorities to establish conservation measures, including water reuse. Several water reuse schemes operate in islands with severe water scarcity, their main applications being in landscape and crop irrigation. However, islands with abundant groundwater resources consider reuse and the advanced treatment it entails as an environmental protection measure, rather than as part of a water saving strategy. This article analyzes the role of water reuse in the management of water resources in the Canary Islands and the Region of Madeira. © IWA Publishing 2012.
@article{delgado_water_2012,
	title = {Water reuse in the management of island water resources: {The} case of the {Canary} {Islands} and the {Region} of {Madeira}},
	volume = {61},
	issn = {00037214},
	url = {https://www2.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84874620690&doi=10.2166%2faqua.2012.028&partnerID=40&md5=634c2020aa3c4e465087df12c0fc266b},
	doi = {10.2166/aqua.2012.028},
	abstract = {The integrated management of water resources has taken on great importance in recent years, especially in insular environments such as the Canary Islands and Madeira, which share geological, environmental, and economic characteristics. Nowadays, due to over-exploitation of aquifers, most of these islands cannot meet their water demand with the traditional resources, forcing their water authorities to establish conservation measures, including water reuse. Several water reuse schemes operate in islands with severe water scarcity, their main applications being in landscape and crop irrigation. However, islands with abundant groundwater resources consider reuse and the advanced treatment it entails as an environmental protection measure, rather than as part of a water saving strategy. This article analyzes the role of water reuse in the management of water resources in the Canary Islands and the Region of Madeira. © IWA Publishing 2012.},
	language = {English},
	number = {8},
	journal = {Journal of Water Supply: Research and Technology - AQUA},
	author = {Delgado, S. and Rodríguez-Gómez, L.E. and Vera, L. and Álvarez, M. and Díaz, F. and Rodríguez-Sevilla, J.},
	year = {2012},
	keywords = {Advanced treatment, Aquifers, Canary Islands, Canary islands, Conservation measures, Economic characteristics, Hydrogeology, Insular environment, Integrated management, Islands, Madeira, Overexploitation, Portugal, Re-claimed water, Role of water, Spain, Wastewater reclamation, Water - savings, Water conservation, Water demand, Water management, Water reuse, Water scarcity, Water supply, authoritarianism, groundwater resource, island, water demand, water management, water resource, water treatment, water use},
	pages = {484--493}
}

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