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Corporate Water Accounting: An Analysis of Methods and Tools for ...

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45<br />

<strong>of</strong> the watersheds in which they <strong>and</strong> their<br />

suppliers operate. In many cases, companies<br />

buy their goods as commodities, <strong>and</strong> are<br />

not aware <strong>of</strong> the upstream impacts <strong>of</strong> their<br />

purchasing choices. In the same way, the<br />

global market means that goods are shipped<br />

worldwide through the ef<strong>for</strong>ts <strong>of</strong> purchase<br />

<strong>and</strong> sales agents who know (or disclose) little<br />

about either the upstream or downstream<br />

water situations relevant to the goods they<br />

h<strong>and</strong>le.<br />

Even when databases <strong>of</strong> external conditions<br />

do exist, governments or private interests<br />

that manage them may be unwilling to<br />

share them with companies or the public. For<br />

governments, this may be due to a fear that<br />

data revealing that the country is under high<br />

water stress might deter companies (or their<br />

investors) from their jurisdiction. For private<br />

sector actors, this may be driven by pr<strong>of</strong>it<br />

motives. In these situations, companies <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

have to collect their own data regarding the<br />

local water context to the best <strong>of</strong> their ability<br />

or try to encourage governments <strong>and</strong> private<br />

practitioners to become more transparent<br />

with their water data.<br />

such as mismanagement <strong>of</strong> water services,<br />

governance deficits, the attitude <strong>of</strong> nearby<br />

communities’ toward the company, <strong>and</strong> a<br />

number <strong>of</strong> other societal <strong>and</strong> political factors<br />

that cannot be measured. These factors can<br />

create risks <strong>for</strong> companies just as easily as<br />

wasteful water use or physical water scarcity.<br />

For instance, a company can use water quite<br />

efficiently <strong>and</strong> operate in a relatively waterrich<br />

area, but if the government that manages<br />

water resources in that watershed does not<br />

have the capacity or desire to manage water<br />

sustainably <strong>and</strong> equitably, the company will<br />

be exposed to risk. For this reason, in addition<br />

to quantitative corporate water accounting,<br />

companies should invest time <strong>and</strong> money in<br />

better underst<strong>and</strong>ing the systems that manage<br />

water <strong>for</strong> their facilities <strong>and</strong> the communities<br />

<strong>and</strong> various other water users that are<br />

served by those systems.<br />

Insufficient precision <strong>of</strong> data<br />

<strong>An</strong>other way in which the data underpinning<br />

water accounting methods can be limiting<br />

is in their granularity/resolution. Using data<br />

that shows the watershed (<strong>and</strong> perhaps the location<br />

within the watershed) from which water<br />

was taken or wastewater was discharged<br />

can be incredibly valuable in helping determine<br />

how that use might impact others in<br />

the watershed. For example, a company that<br />

knows where its facilities are using water in<br />

a system compared to where other users are<br />

withdrawing that water can let them know to<br />

what extent they are affecting others’ access<br />

to water. Similarly, adequate temporal resolution<br />

<strong>of</strong> water use data can allow companies to<br />

assess water-related impacts <strong>and</strong> risks during<br />

different seasons <strong>and</strong> at different points in<br />

the hydrologic cycle. However, as <strong>of</strong> now,<br />

water use data is typically presented as an<br />

annual total.<br />

Finally, in addition to the problems posed<br />

by insufficient data, it is also important to<br />

note the limitations <strong>of</strong> quantitative assessments<br />

<strong>of</strong> water use, discharge, <strong>and</strong> impacts in<br />

general. Though certainly effective at hotspotting<br />

certain water-related risks <strong>and</strong> identifying<br />

physical water stress, quantitative analysis<br />

is not able to show less concrete issues,

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