Semi-arid territories in Latin America face chronic water stress; limited observability and fragmented institutions constrain effective water resources management (WRM). This narrative review synthesizes peer-reviewed evidence (2020–2026) on smart technologies that strengthen basin- and utility-level WRM, using Peru (Piura-like coastal semi-arid contexts) as an anchor and Latin America as a comparative lens. We used a structured, traceable database-based workflow and synthesized studies reporting measurable outcomes across five application categories: drought/flood early warning, hydrometeorological forecasting, water quality surveillance, non-revenue water (NRW)/leakage, and allocation and compliance. Findings were organized into an application-oriented taxonomy spanning remote sensing (RS) and GIS, Internet of Things (IoT)/telemetry, analytics/AI-enabled decision support, and hybrid approaches. Evidence most consistently reports operational gains (coverage, timeliness, predictive performance), while governance outcomes are less frequently measured and appear contingent on interoperability, digital capacity, and sustainable operations and maintenance (O&M) conditions. We conclude with a territorial adoption agenda specifying minimum enabling conditions and a phased pathway from pilots to scalable, eco-efficient smart WRM in Peru and comparable semi-arid settings across Latin America.
Ruiz et al. (Mon,) studied this question.