Facing the challenge of extreme climate: the case of Metropolitan São Paulo

Author:

Braga B.1,Kelman J.2

Affiliation:

1. Secretary of State for Sanitation and Water Resources of the State of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil

2. Director-President of SABESP – Water and Sanitation Company of the State of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil

Abstract

Climate variability has always posed important challenges to water resources planners and engineers. Recent hydrologic data from different parts of the world show that the use of traditional stationary series statistical methods to assess risk and uncertainty may not produce reliable estimates. In particular, the 2014–2015 drought in Metropolitan São Paulo that was followed by major flooding in 2016 shows the intensification of climatic extremes in this part of Brazil. The probability of this drought event is only 0.004 when estimated with data available from 83 years of record, until 2013. Was the drought of 2014–2015 a statistical outlier or should one consider it as an event that can occur again along the planning horizon? The paper describes the hydrologic conditions that resulted in the most severe drought ever recorded and the structural and non-structural initiatives taken by water authorities to avoid social chaos in the Metropolitan Region of São Paulo (21 million inhabitants). Furthermore, it discusses how the drought affected the existing water resources development plan, especially the anticipation of investments in water security. Because financial resources are limited, other investments, equally important but less urgent, are being delayed.

Publisher

IWA Publishing

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Water Science and Technology,Geography, Planning and Development

Reference5 articles.

1. Agência Nacional de Aguas (ANA) (Brazilian National Water Agency) (2015). Encarte especial sobre a crise hídrica, Conjuntura dos Recursos Hídricos no Brasil (Water Resources Conjuncture in Brazil – Water Crisis special issue), 2014 Report. Brasília (in Portuguese), p. 13.

2. Water management in Metropolitan São Paulo;Braga,2006

3. Water supply to the two largest Brazilian metropolitan regions;Kelman;Science Direct, Aquatic Procedia,2015

4. United Nations (2015). 70th General Assembly, Resolution A/70/L.1 September, 2015.

5. US National Security Council (2012). Global Trends 2030: Alternative Worlds, December 2012.

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