Water is one of the Earth’s most distinguishing features. It is essential to life. It is a fundamental part of our society and economy. We need it to drink, to supply food from land and sea, and support businesses of many kinds. We need water to help make things and to help deal with waste. And we need water for our environment. In our world there are tensions between all these different uses of water that are not always being addressed. Water shortages could be made worse with our changing climate leading to more frequent or even more severe droughts. Likewise, flooding could become worse because of increased periods of intense rainfall or because a combination of factors to which sea-level rise (driven by ocean expansion and polar melt) will add makes coastal erosion and flooding that much more of an issue.
So how do we move on from the position we have now where some people and environments are facing water scarcity and others, periodically, facing floods, some of which are devastating; a position where others lack the water or the systems they need to ensure sanitation standards are high enough to avoid disease; and a position where there is no agreed way to balance the competing demands for water other than by perhaps sometimes attempting to trade-off between competing needs.
Submission is open to anyone and submissions may be research articles directly concerned with one or a combination of the SDGs relevant to the uses of water interaction or form a nexi with those Environment focused SDGs that in a sense host the sources of water on the planet (SDGs 6, 13, 14 and 15). Submissions covering an examination of progress on all these SDGs viewed from the perspective of the global water cycle and whether the indicators and targets and evidence available to us all /deliver a more balanced view of water and how it might be best managed in future, are also welcomed for submission.
Submission
Submission is open to anyone and authors can submit until December 2023. If you would like to contribute to the evidence on this open debate please send in your submissions for publication as soon as you wish (here). The Collection will focus on SDGs 6, 13, 14 and 15 but submissions on other SDGs are also welcome if they address a water topic.
For more information or to enquire about submission, please contact the Editors at uclopen.environment@ucl.ac.uk
Authors should read through the journals author guidelines and publishing policies before submitting (https://journals.uclpress.co.uk/ucloe/site/authorguidelines). Please go to https://journals.uclpress.co.uk/ucloe/submissions to submit to the journal.
UCL Press offers waivers and discounts for Article-Processing Charges (APCs) including for articles whose corresponding authors are based in low-income countries (see https://journals.uclpress.co.uk/ucloe/site/about for more information). Authors are requested to contact the Editorial office (uclopen.environment@ucl.ac.uk) prior to submission to enquire and request these discounts. Please note that authors ability to pay any charges regarding to publication are kept separate to editorial review and Editors are not responsible for determining these waivers and discounts.
Note about data
Prior to submission, all authors should ensure that the data relied upon for the paper are either deposited in publicly available repositories (for example, such as GenBank, TreeBASE, Dryad, the Knowledge Network for Biocomplexity or other suitable long-term and stable public repositories, see below notice on data repositories) whenever possible, or have included in the main text for open peer review.
For further information, including about FAIR data sharing, UCL have prepared some useful information about when, where, and how to share data as openly as possible, here https://www.ucl.ac.uk/library/research-support/research-data-management/best-practices/how-guides/sharing-data.
General repositories – for all types of research data (such as Figshare) – may be used where appropriate. UCL authors are encouraged to use the UCL Research Data Repository (please see https://www.ucl.ac.uk/library/research-support/research-data-management/ucl-research-data-repository)
Collection Editors
Dr Luiza Campos, Associate Professor, Civil, Environmental and Geomatic Engineering, UCL, UK
Prof Daniel Olago, Department of Geology, University of Nairobi, Kenya
Prof Dan Osborn, Chair of Human Ecology, Earth Sciences, UCL, UK
Editorial
Water and the UN sustainable development goals
Luiza C. Campos, Daniel Olago and Dan Osborn
2022-01-11 Volume 4 • 2022
Also a part of:
Collection: Special series on Water and the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
Research article
Assessing SDG indicator 6.4.2 ‘level of water stress’ at major basins level
Riccardo Biancalani and Michela Marinelli
2021-11-03 Volume 3 • 2021
Also a part of:
Collection: Special series on Water and the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
Synergies and trade-offs between sanitation and the sustainable development goals
Priti Parikh, Loan Diep, Pascale Hofmann, Julia Tomei, Luiza C. Campos, Tse-Hui Teh, Yacob Mulugetta, Ben Milligan and Monica Lakhanpaul
2021-04-26 Volume 3 • 2021
Also a part of:
Collection: Special series on Water and the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
Mozambique Public investment in water and sanitation sector and the targets of the SDG6
Manuel Salvador Conceição Rebelo
2024-01-23 Volume 6 • 2024
Also a part of:
Collection: Special series on Water and the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)