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Sustainable Water Resource Management in Kazakhstan: An Institutional and Quantitative Assessment

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  • Kudaibergenova M. Rabiga

    (Department of Chemistry and Chemical Technology, Faculty of Technology, M. Kh. Dulaty Taraz University, 71 Tole bi Avenue, 080000 Taraz, Kazakhstan)

  • Bolatbek B. Asparukh

    (Department of Management, Higher School of Economics and Business, Al-Farabi Kazakh National University, 71 Al-Farabi Avenue, 050040 Almaty, Kazakhstan)

  • Spanov U. Magbat

    (Department of Management, Higher School of Economics and Business, Al-Farabi Kazakh National University, 71 Al-Farabi Avenue, 050040 Almaty, Kazakhstan)

  • Arman A. Kabdushev

    (Department of Chemistry and Chemical Technology, Faculty of Technology, M. Kh. Dulaty Taraz University, 71 Tole bi Avenue, 080000 Taraz, Kazakhstan)

  • Seitzhan A. Orynbayev

    (Department of Chemistry and Chemical Technology, Faculty of Technology, M. Kh. Dulaty Taraz University, 71 Tole bi Avenue, 080000 Taraz, Kazakhstan)

Abstract

Sustainable water resource management in arid and transboundary-dependent regions requires that hydrological assessment be integrated with institutional governance analysis. This study provides a comprehensive hydro-institutional evaluation of water sustainability in Kazakhstan using a multi-source empirical framework. The analysis is based on international and national datasets (FAO AQUASTAT, World Bank, national statistics for 2010–2024) and incorporates key indicators, including per capita renewable water resources, sectoral withdrawal structure, transboundary dependence, and water stress. In addition, a Water Sustainability Composite Index and a Regional Vulnerability Index were developed to capture system-wide sustainability and spatial heterogeneity. The results show that Kazakhstan possesses moderate renewable water availability (approximately 5411 m 3 per capita per year), yet exhibits significant structural vulnerability due to high transboundary dependence (40.64%), dominant agricultural water use (≈57%), and infrastructure inefficiencies (25–35% losses). Regional analysis reveals substantial disparities, with southern irrigation-dependent regions demonstrating higher vulnerability compared to resource-abundant eastern basins. Elasticity analysis indicates that improvements in irrigation efficiency have a substantially greater impact on sustainability than equivalent changes in transboundary inflows, highlighting the dominant role of internal system performance. The findings suggest that water sustainability in Kazakhstan is primarily constrained by governance effectiveness and efficiency limitations rather than absolute resource scarcity. This study contributes to the literature by integrating quantitative hydrological indicators with institutional analysis through a composite modeling framework, demonstrating that internal system efficiency—particularly irrigation performance—has a significantly greater influence on sustainability outcomes than external hydrological variability. The proposed approach provides a transferable methodology for assessing water sustainability in semi-arid and transboundary contexts.

Suggested Citation

  • Kudaibergenova M. Rabiga & Bolatbek B. Asparukh & Spanov U. Magbat & Arman A. Kabdushev & Seitzhan A. Orynbayev, 2026. "Sustainable Water Resource Management in Kazakhstan: An Institutional and Quantitative Assessment," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(12), pages 1-16, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:12:p:5880-:d:1962716
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