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Abstract

Urban forests are critical for climate adaptation and liveability, but effective irrigation management-key to their sustainability-remains poorly documented at the global scale. This study addresses this critical knowledge gap by analysing urban forest irrigation practices across 109 cities in 21 countries, offering one of the first global assessments of irrigation approaches, challenges, and opportunities. Using survey data, we examined water sources, irrigation frequency, constraints, and enabling conditions. Our results show that weather conditions were the leading factor influencing irrigation scheduling in 44 % of cities, while 56 % reported no formal water restrictions. Despite the importance of water conservation, 55 % of respondents reported having no water usage monitoring systems, and 73 % lacked financial incentives to promote water-efficient irrigation. A large majority (80 %) did not use recycled wastewater, and 58 % did not conduct water quality testing. Only 15 % of cities regularly used water-efficient irrigation technologies, and 47 % had no plans to implement smart systems. Over half (56 %) rated their current irrigation practices as only moderately successful. Budget constraints and infrastructure limitations were the most frequently reported challenges, followed by climate change-related concerns. While environmental variables such as mean annual temperature and irrigation need influenced specific practices, local governance and institutional actions had stronger effects. Cities in the Global South reported distinct strategies and constraints compared to those in the Global North. Our findings provide actionable insights for climate-resilient urban water strategies and underscore the need for targeted policies, capacity-building, and efficient technologies to enhance urban forest sustainability worldwide.

Keywords

Climate change; Environmental factors; Irrigation technology; Smart urban forestry; Water irrigation need; Water management

Published in

Sustainable cities and society
2025, volume: 130, article number: 106510
Publisher: ELSEVIER

SLU Authors

UKÄ Subject classification

Landscape Architecture
Environmental Studies in Social Sciences

Publication identifier

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scs.2025.106510

Permanent link to this page (URI)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/142941