Water availability in +2°C and +4°C worlds

Author:

Fung Fai1,Lopez Ana12,New Mark1

Affiliation:

1. Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3QY, UK

2. Centre for Climate Change Economics and Policy, London School of Economics and Political Science, Houghton Street, London WC2A 2AE, UK

Abstract

While the parties to the UNFCCC agreed in the December 2009 Copenhagen Accord that a 2°C global warming over pre-industrial levels should be avoided, current commitments on greenhouse gas emissions reductions from these same parties will lead to a 50 : 50 chance of warming greater than 3.5°C. Here, we evaluate the differences in impacts and adaptation issues for water resources in worlds corresponding to the policy objective (+2°C) and possible reality (+4°C). We simulate the differences in impacts on surface run-off and water resource availability using a global hydrological model driven by ensembles of climate models with global temperature increases of 2°C and 4°C. We combine these with UN-based population growth scenarios to explore the relative importance of population change and climate change for water availability. We find that the projected changes in global surface run-off from the ensemble show an increase in spatial coherence and magnitude for a +4°C world compared with a +2°C one. In a +2°C world, population growth in most large river basins tends to override climate change as a driver of water stress, while in a +4°C world, climate change becomes more dominant, even compensating for population effects where climate change increases run-off. However, in some basins where climate change has positive effects, the seasonality of surface run-off becomes increasingly amplified in a +4°C climate.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,General Mathematics

Reference47 articles.

1. UNFCCC. 2009 Copenhagen Accord. Document FCCC/CP/2009/L.7.

2. Copenhagen number crunch

3. Sustainability Institute. 2010 Copenhagen Accord submissions press release 4 February 2010. See http://climateinteractive.org/.

4. Global pattern of trends in streamflow and water availability in a changing climate

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