Barriers to Innovation in Urban Wastewater Utilities: Attitudes of Managers in California
Risk
Global and Planetary Change
Technology
Ecology
Urbanization
Wastewater
Pollution
01 natural sciences
California
Organizational Innovation
6. Clean water
Water Purification
Attitude
Surveys and Questionnaires
Taverne
11. Sustainability
Water Resources
Innovation
Decision Making, Organizational
Decision-making
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
DOI:
10.1007/s00267-016-0685-3
Publication Date:
2016-03-18T19:29:34Z
AUTHORS (6)
ABSTRACT
In many regions of the world, urban water systems will need to transition into fundamentally different forms to address current stressors and meet impending challenges-faster innovation will need to be part of these transitions. To assess the innovation deficit in urban water organizations and to identify means for supporting innovation, we surveyed wastewater utility managers in California. Our results reveal insights about the attitudes towards innovation among decision makers, and how perceptions at the level of individual managers might create disincentives for experimentation. Although managers reported feeling relatively unhindered organizationally, they also spend less time on innovation than they feel they should. The most frequently reported barriers to innovation included cost and financing; risk and risk aversion; and regulatory compliance. Considering these results in the context of prior research on innovation systems, we conclude that collective action may be required to address underinvestment in innovation.
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