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Because allocation of water resources
affects so many aspects of human life and ecosystems, water resources
management must integrate all water-use sectors, scales of governance,
spatial boundaries and temporal scales. Many current and past water
problems stem from the use of single-issue and/or single-sector
approaches.
The desired results of Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) are
ample freshwater for 1) the multiple sectors of human use and
development (domestic, agricultural, industrial, etc.), 2) in-stream
needs for ecosystem processes and biodiversity conservation, and 3) the
needs of upstream and downstream human communities and ecosystems,
including coastal zones. The basic goal is to manage the human and
environmental elements of IWRM to ensure that abundant quantities of
sufficiently clean fresh water are available in the correct place and
the correct time.
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