Water is a vital natural resource that underpins socio-economic development, public health, food security, and territorial stability. However, this essential resource is increasingly exposed to dual pressures: growing scarcity driven by climate change and demographic expansion, and the structural rise in costs associated with its abstraction, treatment, infrastructure maintenance, and distribution. In this context, ensuring the resilience of water services becomes a strategic imperative. This paper proposes an integrated strategic framework that reconciles natural resource preservation with the financial sustainability of water services. The framework is structured around four interrelated pillars: (i) financial sustainability and revenue diversification to secure long-term investment in water resources, (ii) strategic asset management to minimize losses and enhance infrastructure efficiency, (iii) demand management to promote responsible and sustainable water use, and (iv) service differentiation to ensure social equity and inclusive access. These pillars are reinforced by adaptive governance mechanisms emphasizing stakeholder participation, regulatory coherence, and data-driven transparency. Drawing on the Al Wahda Dam case study in Morocco, the analysis demonstrates that sustainable water management requires a holistic approach integrating ecological, economic, and institutional dimensions. The findings highlight the need for proactive and adaptive management strategies capable of safeguarding water as a natural resource while maintaining service continuity and affordability under rising cost pressures.
Lazrak et al. (Thu,) studied this question.