1 / 8

Integrating climate and weather products in Water Resources Management

Integrating climate and weather products in Water Resources Management. by Francis Mutua University of Nairobi. Climate and Water Resources. The climate of the Earth is controlled mainly by the energy from the sun Atmosphere Hydrosphere Lithosphere Biosphere

armand
Download Presentation

Integrating climate and weather products in Water Resources Management

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. Integrating climate and weather products in Water Resources Management by Francis Mutua University of Nairobi

  2. Climate and Water Resources • The climate of the Earth is controlled mainly by the energy from the sun • Atmosphere • Hydrosphere • Lithosphere • Biosphere • Anthropogenic forces change the equilibrium

  3. Climate variability • Climate variability is strongly linked to variations in the the solar output – variability with time-scales > 1 yr. Examples: ENSO (3-6 yrs), sunspot activity (11 yrs), QBO (2 yrs), etc. • The oscillation of the earth around the sun (Time-scale = seasons): Seasonality: notably in precipitation, temperature humidity and evaporation • The combination yields seasons : BNNEAR-NORMALABN in precipitation • Climate variability introduces a corresponding variability in the hydrological cycle

  4. Climate Variability and Water Resources • Hence climate variations have significant consequences on the quality and quantity of water in all hydrological regimes. • Climate variability is the major cause of the extremes which are observed in hydrological systems: floods and droughts • Thus floods (quick onset) and droughts (slow onset) hazards are part of the climate systems and therefore unavoidable • However, they need not become disasters because it is possible to to be prepared for them (especially drought hazards) • Often, they turn into disasters • Famine and crop failure • Deaths (humans and livestock) • Adverse economic impacts and impoverishment • Conflicts • All because climate and weather information and products are not adequately factored into national disaster management.

  5. Climate Change • Climate change • The IPCC projections of air temperature change over the next century, following 2xCO2 is an increase of 1o to 3.5oC, with a "best estimate" of 2oC Ppt, Temp, winds, Press., Evp, etc. • The manifestation of climate change would imply that the water resources would respond with the corresponding irreversible trend (and perhaps higher variability) as with the climate. • Other forcings which exacerbate the impacts of climate change on water resources • population pressure • land use and land management • agricultural and industrial developments • domestic attitudes • recreation demands, etc Ordinarily exacerbate water related disaster risks (floods+droughts) Now add climate change!

  6. Uncertainties Future emissions (SRES story-lines) Future concentrations (climate  CO2 cycle chemistry physics) Response of climate (Time lags) Natural variability? GCMs GCM/RCM Synthetic/Incremental Analoque Downscaling GCMRegional Scenarios for Assessing Impacts of climate change on Water Resources

  7. Integrating climate-change in water resources management

  8. Integrating Climate and weather in Water Resources Management

More Related