Water Value Ambivalence: A Qualitative Exploration of the Multitude of Water Values
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Values of Water
1.2. A Social Practice Approach to Value Creation
2. Materials and Methods
3. Discussion of the Results
3.1. Beyond the Economic Value of Water
“(…) When you get a letter like this that they are working on (…) the water (…) Then I feel, I am a (…) invalid, but then I really feel disabled.”(Christine)
“(…) So I think value of water is almost the foundation (…) on which we build our lives, or on which I build my life. But you don’t see it that way every day. It is only now if you ask it explicitly ‘What is the value of water to you?’ that you see that it’s really the foundation (…) on which everything else is built. (…) Otherwise, you would get sick, you would be hungry, you wouldn’t… It’s (…) everything.”(Max)
“I think water in the first place is just something indispensable and something undervalued let’s say. (…) Yes, that maybe it is taken a bit for granted? (…) Tap open. Water comes out. We (…) consider that very normal here while actually (…) it’s (…) not and there are still many parts of the world where that’s not so (…) obvious at all. And for us, that’s a given.”(Florence)
“(…) Yes, (…) I think everybody should have at least one day of day zero where they open the taps and there is no water. And I really think… Maybe even a week just to have like, let’s call it some like detention because it is one of those things what you don’t know what you have until it’s gone. And then I think it would raise major awareness (…) of the value of water.”(Max)
3.2. Connecting Values to Practices
3.2.1. Health and Quality
“(…) Yes everything is actually potable water (…) running through the pipes. (…) But I don’t trust 100% is it really fully potable? How much lime is in it or other things? (…) From the water company itself but actually also, and then that’s actually our own. (…) That’s an old house. The pipes are old (…) so I don’t have a clue either. The water may come into the house clean, but if the pipes are dirty or full of lime or whatever, it won’t come in here 100% clean either.”(Jonathan)
“(…) Personally I don’t drink my tap water. (…) There’s a taste to it over here. Probably there are still old pipes or something, this is a very old street (…) And there are (…) neighbours who have (…) installed a filter, a carbon filter to filter out all the smells and flavours (…), but I haven’t done that yet so I don’t drink from my (…) tap water. I drink bottled water.”(Thomas)
3.2.2. Hygiene
“The consequences would be a lot of (…) diseases that break out, a lot. It would be a major health hazard, really really a big problem, (…) because everybody’s hygiene would go down. And only if you would eventually survive, which is then… (…) The people that adapt to these things are the ones that survive. It will become like natural selection basically.”(Max)
“I think it starts with being able to wash yourself and then your clothes and your surroundings. (…) I would rather be able to wash myself for a week and not be able to clean than be able to clean for a week and not be able to wash myself, so to speak.”(Mila)
3.2.3. Water’s Therapeutic Role
“(…) Then showering because everything does have to do with hygiene, but I don’t think I get through the day if I’m not freshly showered in the morning. That would have a big impact on my life though. (…) It’s hygiene first but besides that yes you don’t feel awake or (…) ready for the day if you haven’t showered, at least I don’t.”(Mila)
“(…) I find that quite relaxing too. Yes (…) that’s a moment for yourself, in that sense if you have a son, you like to have a moment for yourself (…) So yes actually as a value of (…) water… relaxation is part of it (…)”(Jonathan)
3.2.4. Comfort and Convenience
“(…) And you know what…. That water that may even be in (…) [large bottles], they may give me 150 litres of water a week. That doesn’t get into my pipes, that doesn’t get into my boiler. That’s, that’s (…) Yes you mean, it’s bothering you and then yes… (…) You lose comfort and all that. And (…) it’s not fun (…).”(Johan)
“I come from a poor country and there we really had to carry water up to our house. And (…) those people here don’t know that. So we don’t pay water itself but really all those works that have to be done to get to it your house, so the pipe or what is called…”(Patrice)
3.3. Water Value Ambivalence
“Yes, I realize the value myself… Yes, that’s convenience. I’m still human. Convenience is just… (…) I come home, and you don’t want to think about it.”(Kenneth)
“Yes (…), I can stand in the shower for a long time to relax. If I’m stressed, I just take a shower… (…) I know sometimes it’s too long. They used to always say that like “you’re in the shower too long again”. But yes…”(Monique)
“A bath, I do like to do that, but I can’t bring myself to do that anymore either and I actually think it’s a bit wasteful. It’s a seriously big bathtub I have here. I think it can easily hold 130, 140 L of water and if you lie there for ten minutes floating (…). (…) I find that really wasteful. (…) I keep that for when I travel or go to the spa or something like that.”(Thomas)
4. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Dieleman, L.; Geerts, R.; Vandermoere, F.; Brouwer, S. Water Value Ambivalence: A Qualitative Exploration of the Multitude of Water Values. Water 2024, 16, 1236. https://doi.org/10.3390/w16091236
Dieleman L, Geerts R, Vandermoere F, Brouwer S. Water Value Ambivalence: A Qualitative Exploration of the Multitude of Water Values. Water. 2024; 16(9):1236. https://doi.org/10.3390/w16091236
Chicago/Turabian StyleDieleman, Lien, Robbe Geerts, Frédéric Vandermoere, and Stijn Brouwer. 2024. "Water Value Ambivalence: A Qualitative Exploration of the Multitude of Water Values" Water 16, no. 9: 1236. https://doi.org/10.3390/w16091236
APA StyleDieleman, L., Geerts, R., Vandermoere, F., & Brouwer, S. (2024). Water Value Ambivalence: A Qualitative Exploration of the Multitude of Water Values. Water, 16(9), 1236. https://doi.org/10.3390/w16091236