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Advancing a Multi-Administrative Units Watershed Sustainability Index for Local Water Management in the Nong Han Basin, Thailand

Submitted:

14 July 2026

Posted:

16 July 2026

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Abstract
Achieving integrated water resources management at all levels, as called for by Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) target 6.5, requires assessment tools that operate at the local administrative scale. However, watershed sustainability assessments are mostly conducted at the whole-basin or provincial scale, which masks the spatial disparities that matter for local water management. This study develops a sub-district-scale Watershed Sustainability Index (WSI) for the Nong Han Basin, Thailand, by integrating the HELP framework (Hydrology, Environment, Life, and Policy) with the Pressure–State–Response structure, a calibrated QSWAT hydrological model, and spatial analysis in a geographic information system, covering 25 sub-districts. The results show that the basin has a moderate-to-high level of sustainability, with a mean WSI of 0.620: 18 sub-districts are classified as high and 7 as moderate, and none fall into the low category. The Life and Hydrology dimensions are the strongest, whereas the Policy dimension is the limiting factor in most sub-districts. This limitation arises from a low Response component (0.19) rather than from a lack of institutional capacity, as confirmed by the finding that sub-districts with low and high policy scores differ only in the Policy dimension. The apparently uniform aggregate index, combined with the high disparity among dimensional scores, confirms the value of diagnosis at the sub-district scale. The proposed framework translates the assessment results into spatial prioritization, an agency-linked decision matrix, and an intervention typology, thereby supporting evidence-based water management by local administrative organizations.
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Copyright: This open access article is published under a Creative Commons CC BY 4.0 license, which permit the free download, distribution, and reuse, provided that the author and preprint are cited in any reuse.
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