The effect of climate and global change on African water resources

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Center for Environmental Systems Research - University of Kassel Possible impacts of climate change on water availability – sensitivity anlysis and response.
Advertisements

Global Hydrology Modelling and Uncertainty: Running Multiple Ensembles with the University of Reading Campus Grid Simon Gosling 1, Dan Bretherton 2, Nigel.
Joseph Alcamo Center for Environmental Systems Research, KasselSlide 1 Security Diagrams Center for Environmental Systems Research, University of Kassel.
1 Assiniboine River Water Demand and Water Supply Studies Prepared by : Bob Harrison, P. Eng. and Abul Kashem, P. Eng. Surface Water Management Section.
Main-streaming climate variability and change in flood management Avinash Tyagi Director, Climate and Water World Meteorological Organization 4th International.
Why is Groundwater Important? Drinking water for nearly 50% of US 98% of rural domestic supplies 35% of public supplies 42% of irrigation for agriculture.
Dave Sauchyn, Ph.D., P.Geo. C-CIARN Prairies Prairie Adaptation Research Collaborative Senate Committee on Agriculture and Forestry Ottawa, December, 2002.
Víctor Orlando Magaña Rueda Centro de Ciencias de la Atmósfera UNAM Climate Change in Mexico Global Environmental Change: the challenge for North America.
Nidal Salim, Walter Wildi Institute F.-A. Forel, University of Geneva, Switzerland Impact of global climate change on water resources in the Israeli, Jordanian.
Hydrologic Cycle (in 10 3 km 3 ). Distribution on Earth “Water, water everywhere, nor any drop to drink.” – Coleridge, Rime of the Ancient Mariner.
Precipitation statistics Cumulative probability of events Exceedance probability Return period Depth-Duration-Frequency Analysis.
Geomorphic Effects of Dams on Rivers Gordon Grant.
The Hydrologic (Water) Cycle. Surface Water Oceans Rivers and streams Lakes and ponds Springs – groundwater becomes surface water.
Apalachicola/Chattahoochee/Flint Focus Area - USGS WaterSMART NIDIS SE Climate Forum Lake Lanier Islands, GA December 2, 2011.
Alan F. Hamlet Dennis P. Lettenmaier JISAO Center for Science in the Earth System Climate Impacts Group and Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering.
RegIS2: Regional Climate Change Impact & Response Studies RegIS2: Regional Climate Change Impact & Response Studies
(Mt/Ag/EnSc/EnSt 404/504 - Global Change) Water Resources (from IPCC WG-2, Chapter 3) Water Resources Primary Source: IPCC WG-2 Chapter 3 – Freshwater.
Hydrologic Cycle/Water Balances. Earth’s Water Covers approximately 75% of the surface Volcanic emissions Only known substance that naturally exists as.
Climate Change and Water Resources Management WEB pages on water management activities Max Campos San Jose – Costa Rica.
Kristie J. Franz Department of Geological & Atmospheric Sciences Iowa State University
Demands, Supplies & Priorities. Demand Sectors Irrigation Livestock Mining Industrial Commercial Ecosystems Domestic Total Water Demand Major Cities.
The Water Cycle… from clouds to sea.. from sea to clouds…
Water in Colorado: Climate, Hydrology and Uses Dr. Gigi Richard Faculty Director, Water Center at CMU Professor, Geosciences River Cañon - Nestler Water.
Climate Change and The NW Power Supply Climate Impacts on the Pacific Northwest University of Washington April 21, 2009.
Center for Science in the Earth System Annual Meeting June 8, 2005 Briefing: Hydrology and water resources.
CE 424 HYDROLOGY 1 Instructor: Dr. Saleh A. AlHassoun.
CLIMATE CHANGE AND WATER MAKING RIVER BASIN MANAGEMENT PLANS “CLIMATE PROOF” IN SPAIN.
The hydrological cycle of the western United States is expected to be significantly affected by climate change (IPCC-AR4 report). Rising temperature and.
1/38 Urban Flood & Climate Change ----information from APWMF and SIWW Jinping LIU Hydrologist Typhoon Committee Secretariat.
Engineering Hydrology (ECIV 4323)
Watersheds Chapter 9. Watershed All land enclosed by a continuous hydrologic drainage divide and lying upslope from a specified point on a stream All.
AGRON / MTEOR 404 Global Change Changes to Water Resources Raymond Arritt Department of Agronomy.
Assessment and planning of the water resources under various scenarios in the Ganges and Indus basin: Glaciers contribution and WEAP modelling Devaraj.
ARIZONA WATER ATLAS & WATER USE DATA Linda Stitzer Arizona Department of Water Resources
(Mt/Ag/EnSc/EnSt 404/504 - Global Change) Water Resources (from IPCC WG-2, Chapter 3) Water Resources Primary Source: IPCC WG-2 Chapter 3 – Freshwater.
Georgia Climate Change Summit antruth Al Gore: an inconvenient truth IPCC: 4th Assessment Report 2007 Nobel Peace Prize.
Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September.
The scale of the water resource challenge Professor Kevin Hiscock School of Environmental Sciences University of East Anglia
Research & Systematic Observations (IX) Vulnerability Assessment, Impacts and Adaptation Measures (VII) Research & Systematic Observations (IX) Vulnerability.
Climate change impacts on water resources in the southeastern U.S. – Can we adapt? Peter Caldwell USDA Forest Service, Eastern Forest Environmental Threat.
WATER CONSERVATION The process of saving water for future utilization  Need for water conservation – Changes in environmental factors – Better lifestyles.
Ch. 13 Water Resources Our liquid planet glows like a soft blue sapphire in the hard edged darkness of space. There is nothing else like it in the solar.
15.4 Human Influences on the Hydrologic Cycle Runoff and the infiltration rate are greatly influenced by human activity. A major concern in many urban.
Watersheds and Wetlands CHAPTER 1. Lesson 1.5 Factors That Affect Wetlands and Watersheds Human Activities Watershed Quality Health of U.S. Watersheds.
Water Census Progress: DRB Focus Area Perspective Bob Tudor Deputy Director Delaware River Basin Commission.
RACC High School Training June 26, 2012 Jody Stryker University of Vermont Introduction to Watershed Hydrology.
TESC 211 The Science of Environmental Sustainability Autumn Quarter 2011 UWT.
CEE 3430, Engineering Hydrology David Tarboton
Québec’s Actions in Water Resources Management
Patterns of hydrological alteration in the Iberian Peninsula
Lauren Schneider CE394K.2 Surface Water Hydrology Dr. Maidment 4/28/05
Forest and water in changing climate -
Liana Prudencio and Sarah E. Null
Impact of climate change on water cycle: trends and challenges
Water Resources.
Environmental modeling application domains
Water Stress in the continental United states
EC Workshop on European Water Scenarios Brussels 30 June 2003
Water as a limiting factor
Drought Management and Water Scarcity Adaptation
CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS ON THE WATER RESOURCES OF GHANA
LA06 Assessment of Impacts and Adaptation Measures for the Water Resources Sector Due to Extreme Events Under Climate Change Conditions. REGIONAL PROJECT.
Engineering Hydrology (ECIV 4323)
WRE-1 BY MOHD ABDUL AQUIL CIVIL ENGINEERING.
Water Scarcity and Drought EEA Assessment
Engineering Hydrology (ECIV 4323)
Do We Have Enough ? USGS can’t answer that question …. but can provide data and science tools/analyses to help society answer this question. USGS provides.
On the Causes of the Shrinking of Lake Chad
5.7.2 River discharge - streamflow
The scale of the water resource challenge
Presentation transcript:

The effect of climate and global change on African water resources Bernhard Lehner Conservation Science Program, WWF-US

Precipitation

WaterGAP 2 - Overview - Water Availability Water Stress Water Land Cover Climate ... Water Availability Water Availability Runoff/Discharge Water Stress Water Withdrawals Domestic Industrial Irrigation Livestock Population Income Technology Climate Water Withdrawals

Change in AVERAGE river discharge

Droughts ?

Floods ?

TIMING of river flows

DURATION of flow events -20 20 40 60 80 100 120 6 12 18 24 30 36 42 48 Time [months] Monthly discharge [m 3 /s] 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3.5 Threshold level Deficit volume Monthly streamflow hydrograph Accumulated deficit volume Deficit Volume [km ]

Conclusions For studies of climate change impacts on freshwater systems, the climate change signal should be “translated” into hydrological parameters (e.g., flow regimes). Not only averages, but timing and duration of flows have to be assessed. The uncertainties of climate change scenarios are high! Still, we can analyze concurring trends of multiple model runs and estimate the order of magnitude of possible effects.

Recommendations Arguments Resilience: “The healthier an ecosystem, the lower its vulnerability.” Concurring processes: “Retaining forest cover and natural retention areas helps to prevent floods, due to reduced runoff generation and flow velocities — as well as droughts, due to infiltration and groundwater recharge.” “Planning for environmental flows today increases the window of opportunity for future situations.” “Dams are not the answer…”