Resource Management and Sustainability
KS4GE-KS4-D005
Study of global resource distribution and demand patterns for food, water, and energy; the challenge of achieving sustainable resource management at global and local scales; and management strategies for one resource type in depth.
National Curriculum context
Resource management at GCSE addresses perhaps the most pressing geographical challenge of the 21st century: how to provide food, water, and energy for a growing global population sustainably and equitably. The DfE specification requires overview study of global patterns of resource supply and demand for food, water, and energy, examining where resources are abundant and where they are scarce, and why demand is growing in some regions. One resource type (food, water, or energy) is then studied in depth, examining the specific challenges of supply and demand in contrasting contexts (the UK and the wider world) and evaluating strategies for more sustainable management. This domain integrates physical and human geography: physical factors (climate, geology, hydrology) determine where resources exist, while human factors (population, technology, governance, economics) determine how they are used. Sustainability is both a technical and political concept here — who has access to resources, who benefits from resource exploitation, and who bears the costs.
2
Concepts
2
Clusters
2
Prerequisites
2
With difficulty levels
Lesson Clusters
Analyse global water insecurity and evaluate water management strategies
introduction CuratedWater insecurity (C007) opens resource management — pupils map global patterns of water supply and demand, examine the human and physical causes of water stress, and evaluate management strategies (dams, transfers, conservation) and their environmental and social impacts.
Evaluate energy security and the transition to a sustainable energy mix
practice CuratedEnergy security and the changing energy mix (C014) mirrors the water insecurity framework — pupils examine global energy demand patterns, the geopolitics of fossil fuel dependence, and evaluate the economic and environmental case for renewable energy transition.
Teaching Suggestions (1)
Study units and activities that deliver concepts in this domain.
Resource Management: Water and Energy
Geography Study Case StudyPedagogical rationale
Resource Management extends KS3 work on UK water into GCSE-level global analysis of water insecurity and energy security. Pupils study the overview of food/water/energy challenges in the UK, then explore one resource in depth with global case studies. The study links physical geography (climate, hydrology) with human geography (development, governance, technology) and evaluates management strategies for sustainability.
Prerequisites
Concepts from other domains that pupils should know before this domain.
Concepts (2)
Water Insecurity and Management
knowledge AI DirectGE-KS4-C007
The global patterns of water supply and demand, the causes and consequences of water insecurity (including both water scarcity and water stress), and the range of strategies for improving water security sustainably in both high-income and low-income contexts.
Teaching guidance
Teach the distinction between physical water scarcity (insufficient rainfall or groundwater to meet demand) and economic water scarcity (water exists but infrastructure or governance prevents access). The geography of water insecurity is complex: some regions have abundant precipitation but poor infrastructure, while others have high rainfall seasonally but face dry-season deficits. Management strategies should be evaluated as a spectrum from high-tech and capital-intensive (large dams, desalination, inter-basin water transfer) to small-scale and intermediate (rainwater harvesting, irrigation efficiency, borehole construction). GCSE evaluation questions ask students to compare the advantages and disadvantages of different strategies, considering their costs, environmental impacts, social effects, and sustainability. Named examples required: a specific water transfer scheme, a named water conservation project.
Common misconceptions
Students frequently equate water shortage with low rainfall, overlooking economic water scarcity (the problem of access and infrastructure rather than total availability). Students often evaluate large-scale infrastructure solutions (dams, desalination) as superior to small-scale solutions without considering their cost, displacement of communities, and environmental impacts. Students sometimes present water insecurity as affecting only LICs, ignoring water stress in parts of the USA, Australia, and Mediterranean Europe.
Difficulty levels
Can identify that water is essential for life and that some places have more water than others, but cannot explain the causes of water insecurity or distinguish between physical and economic water scarcity.
Example task
Why do some countries not have enough water?
Model response: Some countries do not have enough water because it does not rain much there and it is very hot.
Can explain the difference between physical and economic water scarcity, describe global patterns of water stress, and explain why demand is increasing.
Example task
Explain the difference between physical and economic water scarcity. Give an example of each. (4 marks)
Model response: Physical water scarcity occurs when there is genuinely not enough water to meet demand due to low rainfall, limited river flow or depleted aquifers. For example, parts of the Middle East and North Africa receive very low rainfall and depend on desalination or groundwater extraction. Economic water scarcity occurs when water exists but infrastructure or governance prevents access. For example, parts of sub-Saharan Africa receive adequate rainfall but lack the pipes, pumps, treatment facilities and water management systems to deliver clean water to communities. This distinction is important because the solutions differ: physical scarcity requires supply-side solutions (desalination, water transfer), while economic scarcity requires investment in infrastructure and governance.
Can evaluate water management strategies in contrasting contexts, assess the sustainability of different approaches, and analyse the connections between water insecurity and broader development challenges.
Example task
Evaluate the advantages and disadvantages of large-scale dam projects as a solution to water insecurity. Use named examples. (9 marks)
Model response: Large dams are among the most ambitious water management solutions but carry significant trade-offs. The Three Gorges Dam in China (completed 2006) provides flood control, hydroelectric power and water storage for irrigation, benefiting millions. However, it displaced approximately 1.3 million people, submerged culturally significant sites, disrupted downstream sediment supply (causing erosion), and altered the ecosystem of the Yangtze River. The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (under construction) will provide electricity for Ethiopia's development and store water for irrigation, but downstream countries (Sudan, Egypt) fear reduced Nile flow, creating geopolitical tension. The Aswan High Dam in Egypt has provided irrigation water and electricity since the 1970s but has reduced the Nile's natural flood cycle, causing soil fertility decline in the delta and coastal erosion. The advantages of large dams are: reliable water storage across seasons, hydroelectric power (a renewable energy source), and flood control. The disadvantages are: massive population displacement, environmental damage, disruption of downstream ecosystems and sediment supply, geopolitical conflict over transboundary rivers, and very high construction costs. Small-scale alternatives (rainwater harvesting, borehole construction, improved irrigation efficiency) are less dramatic but may be more sustainable and equitable because they benefit local communities without the large-scale negative impacts. The most effective water management combines strategies at different scales, with large infrastructure for major supply needs and community-level solutions for local access.
Can analyse water insecurity as a geopolitical issue, evaluate the concept of 'virtual water' and water footprints, and assess whether water will become a major source of international conflict.
Example task
Will water scarcity lead to international conflict in the 21st century? Evaluate the evidence for and against this claim.
Model response: The 'water wars' thesis holds that as demand for water increases and supply becomes more uncertain (due to climate change, population growth and pollution), competition over shared water resources will generate international conflict. Evidence supporting this includes: over 260 river basins are shared by two or more countries, creating potential for dispute; the Jordan, Nile and Indus rivers are all sources of geopolitical tension; and climate change models predict reduced water availability in already water-stressed regions (the Middle East, Central Asia, the Sahel). However, the evidence against the water wars thesis is also substantial. Historically, water disputes have more often led to cooperation than conflict: international agreements on shared rivers (the Mekong River Commission, the Indus Waters Treaty) have been remarkably durable even during periods of wider conflict. The Indus Waters Treaty between India and Pakistan has survived three wars. The reason is that water is so essential that both sides have powerful incentives to negotiate rather than fight. The greater risk may be within-country conflict: competition between urban and agricultural water users, between upstream and downstream communities, and between wealthy and poor populations within the same country generates significant social tension. Climate change may intensify these domestic conflicts by reducing supply while demand continues to grow. The concept of 'virtual water' — the water embedded in traded goods (it takes 15,000 litres of water to produce 1kg of beef) — suggests that global trade effectively transfers water from water-rich to water-poor regions, reducing the pressure for direct conflict over physical water supplies. The most probable future involves increasing water stress generating political tension and local conflict, managed through a combination of international agreements, technological solutions (desalination, efficiency), demand reduction (pricing, regulation) and trade, rather than large-scale interstate war.
Delivery rationale
Geography knowledge concept — locational, place, and process knowledge deliverable with visual resources.
Energy Security and the Changing Energy Mix
knowledge AI DirectGE-KS4-C014
The global patterns of energy demand and supply, the concept of energy security (having access to reliable, affordable energy), and the environmental, economic, and political factors shaping the global transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy sources.
Teaching guidance
Teach energy using a production-consumption framework: where is energy produced (oil, gas, coal reserves, nuclear plants, renewable installations) and where is it consumed (highest per capita in HICs, fastest growth in LICs and NEEs). Energy security depends on: domestic reserves (more secure, less dependent on imports), energy mix diversity (less vulnerable to price shocks or supply disruption), and infrastructure (reliable transmission and distribution). Renewable energy development should be evaluated: solar and wind are increasingly cost-competitive but intermittent; hydroelectric is reliable but location-specific and has environmental costs; nuclear is reliable and low-carbon but expensive and politically contested. For evaluation questions, students should assess strategies against: reliability, environmental impact, cost, security of supply, and social acceptability.
Common misconceptions
Students often describe renewable energy as 'free' or 'unlimited' without recognising the capital costs of installation, the land requirements, the intermittency problem, and the material requirements for turbines and solar panels. Students frequently conflate energy security with renewable energy, not recognising that a country with large domestic fossil fuel reserves may have high energy security despite low renewables use. Students sometimes present the transition to renewables as a purely technical problem, overlooking the political economy of fossil fuel interests, international trade relationships, and the energy needs of developing countries.
Difficulty levels
Can identify that the world uses different types of energy (fossil fuels, renewables) but cannot explain the concept of energy security or the factors shaping the energy mix.
Example task
Name two types of renewable energy.
Model response: Solar power and wind power.
Can explain the concept of energy security, describe the global energy mix, and compare the advantages and disadvantages of different energy sources.
Example task
Explain what energy security means and why it is important for a country. (4 marks)
Model response: Energy security means having access to reliable, affordable energy supplies to meet a country's needs. It is important because energy is essential for industry, transport, heating and electricity. A country is energy secure if it has its own energy resources (like Norway with oil and gas) or reliable import arrangements. A country is energy insecure if it depends heavily on energy imports from politically unstable regions. For example, many European countries depend on Russian gas imports, which creates vulnerability to supply disruptions during political disputes. Energy security can be improved by diversifying the energy mix (using multiple sources) and developing domestic resources (renewables, nuclear).
Can evaluate different energy strategies against multiple criteria (reliability, cost, environmental impact, security), analyse the challenges of the energy transition, and use named examples of energy policy.
Example task
Evaluate the view that renewable energy can replace fossil fuels entirely. Consider the technical, economic and political challenges. (9 marks)
Model response: Renewable energy has made remarkable progress: globally, solar and wind are now the cheapest forms of new electricity generation in most markets, and renewable capacity is growing rapidly. However, complete replacement of fossil fuels faces significant challenges. The intermittency problem is the most fundamental technical challenge: solar panels produce no electricity at night and reduced electricity on cloudy days; wind turbines require wind within a specific speed range. Battery storage technology is improving but is not yet capable of storing sufficient energy to cover extended periods of low renewable output. Fossil fuel use in transport, heating and industrial processes (particularly steel, cement and chemicals) is harder to decarbonise than electricity generation. The economic challenge is managing the transition: fossil fuel industries employ millions globally, and fossil fuel-producing countries face economic disruption. Saudi Arabia, Russia and Australia have structural economic incentives to slow the transition. The political challenge is maintaining public support for the costs of transition while managing the distributional effects: energy price increases disproportionately affect low-income households. Germany's Energiewende (energy transition) demonstrates both the potential and the difficulty: renewables now provide over 40% of electricity, but the transition has been expensive and controversial, and Germany still uses significant coal and gas. The most realistic assessment is that renewables can and should replace most fossil fuel use in electricity generation within two to three decades, but complete replacement across all sectors will take longer and will require technological breakthroughs in storage, green hydrogen and industrial processes alongside policy changes.
Can analyse energy as a geopolitical issue, evaluate the concept of energy justice, and connect energy policy to broader questions of development and sustainability.
Example task
Is it fair to expect low-income countries to limit their use of fossil fuels when high-income countries industrialised using them? Evaluate the 'energy justice' argument.
Model response: The energy justice argument exposes a fundamental tension in global climate and energy policy. High-income countries (the UK, USA, Germany, Japan) industrialised over two centuries using fossil fuels, generating the atmospheric CO2 that is now causing climate change. Cumulative emissions correlate closely with economic development: the countries that are richest today are those that burned the most fossil fuel historically. Low-income countries argue that they should have the same right to use cheap, abundant fossil fuels to develop their economies, and that expecting them to leapfrog to expensive renewables is a form of developmental injustice. India's per capita emissions are less than one-tenth of the USA's; sub-Saharan Africa's are even lower. However, the physical reality of climate change means that continuing to expand fossil fuel use globally will produce catastrophic warming regardless of the moral argument. The key question is not whether the injustice is real (it clearly is) but how to address it while still reducing global emissions. The most widely discussed solution is 'common but differentiated responsibilities' (embedded in the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change): all countries commit to emissions reduction, but wealthy countries take on more ambitious targets and provide financial and technological support to help developing countries follow a low-carbon development path. The Green Climate Fund and technology transfer mechanisms are designed to do this, but funding has consistently fallen short of pledges. The falling cost of renewables may partly resolve the dilemma by making low-carbon development economically attractive rather than just morally necessary, but the scale of investment required to electrify sub-Saharan Africa using renewables is enormous and requires international financial commitment that has not yet materialised.
Delivery rationale
Geography knowledge concept — locational, place, and process knowledge deliverable with visual resources.