
Paper:
Climate Change Demands New Ways to Plan Water Management
Columbia
Basin
Bulletin
February 1, 2008
The past is no longer a
reliable base on which to plan the future of water management.
So says a paper by a
prominent group of hydrologists and climatologists, published Thursday
in Science, that calls for fundamental changes to the science behind
water planning and policy.
"With the climate
changing, past years aren't necessarily representative of the future
anymore," said co-author Dennis Lettenmaier, a professor of civil
engineering at the
University
of
Washington
. "This paper says that
the way business has been done in the past will no longer work in a
changing climate."
Global spending on water
infrastructure is currently more than $500 billion per year. Until now,
managers at municipal water boards, the Army Corps of Engineers, the
U.S. Bureau of Reclamation and other federal, state and local agencies
have operated on the premise that historical patterns could be counted
on to continue. The assumption was that variability from year to year
occurred within stationary, unchanging patterns.
But human-induced changes
to Earth's climate have begun to shift the averages and the extremes for
rainfall, snowfall, evaporation and stream flows, the authors write.
These are crucial factors when planning for floods or droughts, choosing
the size of water reservoirs or deciding how much water to allocate for
residential, industrial and agricultural uses.
"Historically,
looking back at past observations has been a good way to estimate future
conditions," said lead author Christopher Milly, a research
hydrologist with the U.S. Geological Survey. "But climate change
magnifies the possibility that the future will bring droughts or floods
you never saw in your old measurements."
The old way of doing
business is dead, the authors write. And it cannot be revived. Even with
an aggressive reduction in greenhouse gas emissions, warming will
persist and global water patterns will continue to show
never-before-seen behavior.
The authors thus propose
a planning framework like the Harvard Water Program, a project from the
late 1950s to the early 1960s in which scientists and engineers hammered
out the basis for the current water-management policies. The authors
call for a renewed effort in the spirit of the earlier program that
would incorporate shifting averages and variability.
Not all regions will
experience the same changes in flows.
"Our best current
estimates are that water availability will increase substantially in
northern
Eurasia
,
Alaska
,
Canada
and some tropical regions,
and decrease substantially in southern
Europe
, the
Middle East
, southern
Africa
and southwestern
North America
," Milly said. Drying
regions will likely also experience more frequent droughts, he said.
In the West, changes in
precipitation and the timing of snowmelt now seem likely to affect
seasonal flow patterns that are critical to salmon runs, water supply
and other water uses, Lettenmaier said.
"For agencies like
the Army Corps of Engineers and the Bureau of Reclamation, this would
mean fundamental changes in the way they do business," he said.
"If you look at plans by those agencies for management of the
Columbia River
, essentially they've
ignored climate change. For instance, until quite recently, the National
Marine Fisheries Service didn't even mention what climate change might
mean for rehabilitation of fish runs."
Asked whether the new
paper would prompt changes in management practices, Lettenmaier said:
"I think so. I think it will become increasingly hard to ignore
climate change in water management."
Co-authors are Julio
Betancourt and Robert Hirsch at the U.S. Geological Survey, Malin
Falkenmark at the Stockholm International Water Institute in
Sweden
, Zbigniew Kundzewicz at the
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in
Germany
and Ronald Stouffer at the
Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory in
Princeton
,
N.J.
The article can be
accessed at http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/319/5863/573
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