1 / 32

IWRM as a Tool for Adaptation to Climate Change

Impacts on Water Use Sectors and Impact Assessment Techniques. IWRM as a Tool for Adaptation to Climate Change. OUTLINE. Impacts of climate change on water resources Projected climate changes by region Impacts climate change on selected sectors

verity
Download Presentation

IWRM as a Tool for Adaptation to Climate Change

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Impacts on Water Use Sectors and Impact Assessment Techniques IWRM as a Tool for Adaptation to Climate Change

  2. OUTLINE • Impacts of climate change on water resources • Projected climate changes by region • Impacts climate change on selected sectors • Approaches of Climate Change Impact, Adaptation and Vulnerability (CCIAV) Assessment • Climate change scenarios • Water resources and climate change • Modelling of water resources systems.

  3. Projected change in hydro meteorological variables • Based on 15 Global Circulation Models (GCMs) • SRES A1B scenario • Four variables: • precipitation • evaporation • soil moisture • runoff • Annual mean changes for 2080–2099 relative to 1980–1999 • Regions where models agree on the sign of change are stippled.

  4. Inferences • Heightened water scarcities in several semi-arid and arid regions including • Mediterranean Basin • Western USA • Southern Africa • North-eastern Brazil. • Precipitation is expected to increase at high latitudes (e.g. northern Europe) and in some subtropical regions.

  5. Projected change spatial patterns of precipitation intensity and dry days • Based on 9 GCMs • SRES A1B scenario • Changes in spatial pattern of • precipitation intensity • dry days • Annual mean changes for 2080–2099 relative to 1980–1999 • Stippling: at least 5 out of 9 models concur denoting that change is significant

  6. Projected changes by region • Africa: • Water scarcity conditions in northern and southern Africa • More precipitation in Eastern and western Africa • Nile Delta expected to be impacted by rising sea levels. • Asia: • Reduce precipitation in the headwaters of the Euphrates and Tigris • Winter precipitation to decrease over the Indian subcontinent, and monsoon rain events to intensify • Maximum and minimum monthly flows of Mekong expected to increase and decrease, respectively • Decline of glaciers is expected to continue reducing water supplies to large populations.

  7. Projected changes by region -2- • Australia and New Zealand: • Runoff in the Darling Basin expected to decline • Drought frequency to increase in the eastern Australia • Europe: • Mean annual precipitation to increase in Northern Europe and decrease further south • Mediterranean and some parts of central and Eastern Europe to be more prone to droughts • Flood risk expected to increase in Eastern and Northern Europe and the Atlantic coast.

  8. Projected changes by region -3- • Latin America: • Number of wet days expected to increase over parts of south-eastern South America and central Amazonia • Extreme dry seasons to become more frequent in Central America • Glaciers are expected to continue the observed declining trend. • North America: • Climate change to constrain already over-allocated water resources, especially in the semi-arid western USA • Water levels to drop in the Great Lakes • Shrinkage of glaciers to continue.

  9. Major water resources systems and sectors to be impacted by climate change • Systems and sectors connected to human development and environment: • Urban infrastructure: water supply and sanitation, urban drainage and solids • Water related natural disasters: floods, droughts, landslide and avalanche • Rural development: agriculture, food security, livelihoods and environment • Energy: demand and production (hydropower) • Transportation: navigation • Health: Human and animals • Environment: system sustainability in wetlands, water quality, forest burn, etc.

  10. Impacts of CC on food production

  11. Agriculture Possible positive impacts because of increased CO2 concentrations and length of growing season Strongly dependent on water (amount and timing): Rain-fed agriculture: precipitation Irrigated agriculture: water supply Examples: Warly snowmelt > water shortage in summer Insufficient treated wastewater used for irrigation > water-born diseases Too much precipitation: direct damage to crops, soil erosion Too little precipitation: direct damage to crops Strong regional and local differences: those least able to cope (smallholder farmers in marginal areas) will be affected hardest.

  12. Fisheries Increased stress on fish populations: Higher temperatures > less oxygen available Increased oxygen demand Deteriorated water quality Reduced flows Other human impacts probably greater: Overfishing Flood mitigation Water abstractions Lake Tanganyika: reduced primary productivity due to decreased depth of thermocline.

  13. Impacts of CC on water supply Further reduction of water for drinking and hygiene Lowering efficiency of sewerage systems > more micro-organisms in raw water supply Increased concentration of pollutants (less dilution) More overflows in sewerage systems with increased precipitation > spread of waterborne diseases Increased salinity water resources.

  14. Impacts of CC on health

  15. Impacts of CC on energy sector • Temperature increase leading to increased energy demand and less availability of cooling water • Energy system highly dependent on hydropower, i.e. on water availability • Periods of low flow can create conflicts with other users.

  16. Impacts of CC on transportation • Water links with transportation • Use of drainage systems for navigation • Drainage interface with the design of transportation infrastructure networks  • Implications of climate change • Reduction in the flow quantity or its distribution over the year shall result in reduced river levels • Big boats cannot be used thus more boats are required for the same loads, increasing cost, energy use and emissions • Increase in the rainfall intensity can severely damage the transportation infrastructure due to exposure to higher flooding than the infrastructure is designed for.

  17. IWRM as a Tool for Adaptation to Climate Change IMPACT ASSESSMENT TECHNIQUES

  18. CCIAV assessment approaches (Frameworks) Impact assessment Adaptation assessment Vulnerability assessment Integrated assessment Risk management. CCIAV: Climate Change Impact, Adaptation and Vulnerability

  19. Characteristics of CCIAV assessment approaches* Source: Climate Change 2007: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability.

  20. General Impact Assessment Approach

  21. The 7-step assessment framework of IPCC Define problem Select method Test method/sensitivity Select scenarios Assess biophysical/socio-economic impacts Assess autonomous adjustments Evaluate adaptation strategies.

  22. Three types of climate change scenarios Scenarios based on outputs from GCMs Synthetic scenarios Analogue scenarios.

  23. General Circulation Models (GCMs) Computer applications designed to simulate the Earth’s climate system for the purpose of projecting potential climate scenarios Range in complexity from simple energy balance models to 3D General Circulation Models (GCM) The state-of-the-art in climate modeling is represented by the Atmosphere-Ocean GCM (AOGCM).

  24. Types of GCM runs Equilibrium: Both current and future climates are assumed to be in state of equilibrium Simulations are executed assuming doubling or quadrupling of GHGs concentrations Low computation cost, yet unrealistic. Transient: Future climate is simulated assuming a steady increase in CO2 Costly to run and needs a warming period to avoid underestimating the earlier stage after present.

  25. Advantages/disadvantages of using GCMto generate climate scenarios Advantages: Produces globally consistent estimates of larger number of key climate variables (e.g. temperature, precipitation, pressure, wind, humidity, solar radiation) for projected changes in GHGs based on scientifically credible approach Disadvantages: Simulations of current regional climate often inaccurate Geographic and temporal scale not fine enough for many impact assessments May not represent the full range of potential climate changes in a region.

  26. Dynamic downscaling Dynamic downscaling is done by nesting a fine-scale climate model in a coarse-scale model

  27. Synthetic scenarios Based on combined incremental changes in meteorological variables such as (temperature, precipitation) Can be based on synthetic records created from combining baseline data with temperature changes, e.g. +2oC, and precipitation changes, e.g. 10% Changes in meteorological variables are assumed to be annually uniform; few studies introduced temporal and spatial variability into synthetic scenarios.

  28. Advantages/disadvantages of synthetic scenarios Advantages: Inexpensive, easy to apply and comprehensible by policy makers and stakeholders Represent wide spectrum of potential climate changes Identify sensitivity of given sectors to changes in specific meteorological variables. Disadvantages Assumption of uniform change of meteorological variables over large areas may produce scenarios that are not physically possible. May not be consistent with estimates of changes in average global climate Synthetic meteorological variables may not be internally consistent with each other, e.g. increased precipitation is expected to be associated with increased clouds and humidity.

  29. Analogue scenarios Temporal analogue scenarios based on using past warm climates as scenarios of future climate Spatial analogue scenarios based on using contemporary climates in other locations as scenarios of future climate in study areas IPCC has made recommendation against using the analogue scenarios since temporal analogues of global warming were not caused by anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases and that no valid basis exists that spatial analogues are likely to be similar to those in the future.

  30. Water resources and climate change Assessment of impact of climate change on water resources and identification of adaptation strategies requires consideration of both its biophysical and socioeconomic aspects. Integrated water resources management (IWRM) provides an ideal platform to carry out these tasks.

  31. Water resources system incorporates natural and human-made components Source: UNFCCC Handbook on Vulnerability and Adaptation Assessment.

  32. Modeling of water resources systems Two general types: optimization and simulation models Simulation models are suitable for scenario-based climate impact assessment studies.

More Related