Circular Economy and Water Sustainability: Systematic Review of Water Management Technologies and Strategies (2018–2024).
Fecha
2025Autor
Farfán Chilicaus, G.C.
Cruz Salinas, L.E.
Silva León, P.M.
Lizarzaburu-Aguinaga, D.A.
Vera Zelada, P.
Vera Zelada, L.A.
Luque Luque, E.O.
Licapa-Redolfo, R.
Ramos Farroñán, E.V.
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemResumen
The transition toward a circular water economy addresses accelerating water scarcity and pollution. A PRISMA-2020 systematic review of 50 peer-reviewed articles (January 2018–April 2024) mapped current technologies and management strategies, seeking patterns, barriers, and critical bottlenecks. Bibliometric analysis revealed the following three dominant patterns: (i) rapid diffusion of membrane bioreactors, constructed wetlands, and advanced oxidation processes; (ii) research geographically concentrated in Asia and the European Union; (iii) industry’s marked preference for by-product valorization. Key barriers—high energy costs, fragmented regulatory frameworks, and low social acceptance—converge as critical constraints during scale-up. The following three practical action lines emerge: (1) adopt progressive tariffs and targeted tax credits that internalize environmental externalities; (2) harmonize water-reuse regulations with comparable circularity metrics; (3) create multi-actor platforms that co-design projects, boosting local legitimacy. These findings provide policymakers and water-sector practitioners with a clear roadmap for accelerating Sustainable Development Goals 6, 9, and 12 through circular, inclusive, low-carbon water systems.







