Google Trends indicators to inform water planning and drought management

R. L. Wilby*, C. Murphy, P. O'Connor, J. J. Thompson, T. Matthews

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Indicators are important tools for tracking the socio-environmental impacts of droughts and building resilience to climate change. We begin with an overview of metrics used for water planning and drought management, with particular emphasis on the UK. We explain how considerations of cost, immediacy, access, consistency, relevance, reliability and others denote the suitability of information for developing new indicators. We then demonstrate the potential of Google Trends (GT) online search data as drought indicators for England and Ireland. We show that search terms such as ‘drought’, ‘water butt’ and ‘hosepipe ban’ correlate significantly with conventional hydroclimatic data as well as with newspaper reports of various drought impacts during the period 2011–2022. GT data also show evidence of rising interest in water saving technologies, especially for outdoor water use. Meanwhile, online searches for ‘Defra’ and ‘Environment Agency’ have declined and are more often associated with flood episodes than droughts. Interest in water companies in England is more likely around hosepipe bans than water leakage (although this varies by company). We discuss the implications of these findings for targeting information campaigns, plus prospects for monitoring drought impacts and public sentiment in near real-time.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere12567
JournalGeographical Journal
Volume190
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2024

Keywords

  • drought
  • England
  • Google Trends
  • indicator
  • Ireland
  • newspapers

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