Abstract
Water availability in adequate quantities and qualities is a fundamental requirement for tourism. In the Mediterranean, one of the world’s leading tourist destinations, water availability is subject to modest and erratic precipitation figures which may decline with climate change. The tourist industry therefore may have to assure future supplies by either recurring to new technologies such as desalination or increasing efficiency in water use. A third and yet little explored alternative would be to seek for complementary of uses with irrigation, the traditional user in many coastal Mediterranean areas and holder of substantial amounts of water. In this paper we present the example of the Consorcio de Aguas de la Marina Baja to show how Benidorm, in Mediterranean Spain and one of the most important tourist centers of the Mediterranean, obtains part of its water through agreements with farmers by which these trade their water with Benidorm and other towns’ treated wastewater of enough quality to be used for irrigation, and obtain several compensations in return. The advantages and disadvantages of the water trade between farmers and tourist interests in the Benidorm area are discussed and we argue that solutions to the pending water crisis of many coastal Mediterranean tourist areas may not need to rely uniquely on expensive technologies to generate new resources but may attempt other alternatives.
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Acknowledgments
We would like to thank Mr. Francisco Santiago, general manager of the Consorcio de Aguas de la Marina Baja, the time spent with us discussing the issues presented in this paper. Part of the research was funded by the Spanish CICYT under grant numbers CSO2009-12772-03-01, and CSO2009-12772-03-03.
The authors would like to thank Leandro Del Moral and Pilar Paneque as well as the editor and two anonymous referees for helpful comments on previous versions of the manuscript.
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Rico-Amoros, A.M., Sauri, D., Olcina-Cantos, J. et al. Beyond Megaprojects?. Water Alternatives for Mass Tourism in Coastal Mediterranean Spain. Water Resour Manage 27, 553–565 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11269-012-0201-3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11269-012-0201-3