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Atmospher Sci & Global Chg
Research Highlights

August 2014

Water Scarcity and Climate Change through 2095

Model projections reveal future water availability based on multiple climate change scenarios and policies

World water scarcity map
Future water scarcity may pose a significant challenge to our ability to adapt to or mitigate climate change. Enlarge Image.

Results: What will a global water scarcity map look like in 2095? Radically different, according to scientists at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, depending on the type and the stringency of the climate mitigation policies chosen to reduce carbon pollution.

In a first of its kind comprehensive analysis, the researchers, working at the Joint Global Change Research Institute, used a unique modeling capability that links economic, energy, land-use and climate systems to show the effects of global change on water scarcity. When they incorporated water use and availability in this powerful engine and ran scenarios of possible climate mitigation policy targets, they found that without any climate policy to curb carbon emissions, half the world will be living under extreme water scarcity. Climate mitigation policies that increase growth of certain water-hungry biofuels may actually exacerbate water scarcity.

Why It Matters: Water scarcity may pose a significant challenge to our ability to adapt to or mitigate climate change. Why? For example, growing bioenergy crops to replace fossil fuel sources, an important component of many technology strategies that reduce greenhouse gas emissions, rely on plentiful water. Thus, water availability could impose severe limits on both emissions mitigation and climate adaptation.

PNNL enhanced the Global Change Assessment Model (GCAM) to assess the impact of changing water supplies and demands that stem from a simultaneously evolving human population, economic system, technology and climate.

"All high-resolution global integrated assessment models lack any representation of water systems," said Dr. Mohamad Hejazi, lead author and climate scientist at PNNL, working at the Joint Global Change Research Institute. "This implicitly assumes that emissions mitigation to climate change will be unaffected by water scarcity. Yet, we found that water is a significant component of our climate's future, even if societies deploy mitigation policies."

Methods: The team constructed a new gridded water-balance global hydrologic model and added the component to the GCAM water system. Combined with high-resolution (spatially downscaled) representations of all the existing water demand sectors in GCAM, this produced a dynamic, high-resolution view of global, annual water scarcity. They modeled six major water demand sectors (irrigation, livestock, domestic, electricity generation, mining, and manufacturing) in GCAM at multiple regional scales and then spatially downscaled. Further, they simulated six policy scenarios (two types and three targets of radiative forcings) in GCAM to estimate the impacts on water scarcity. Simulating these scenarios in GCAM allowed the researchers to quantify, in an integrated framework, the effects of climate mitigation policies on global and regional water scarcity estimates, while accounting for uncertainty arising from using different general circulation models and following different types and constraining levels of climate policies on water scarcity.

GCAM
      Schematic of the Global Change Assessment Model and systems, with water systems added.

When compared to a baseline scenario where no climate policy is implemented, water scarcity declines under a universal carbon tax mitigation policy, but it increases with a fossil fuel and industrial emissions carbon tax mitigation scenario by the year 2095, mainly due to variations in prevailing bioenergy productions. The analyses show the baseline scenario results in more than half of the world's population living under extreme water scarcity by the end of the 21st century. By one measure (grid scale) in 2050, 36 percent of the global population will have greater water demands than water available in a year; and by 2095, that number increases to 44 percent. They also performed the calculations at watershed scale to complement the grid scale results.

What's Next? This study marks an important milestone in closing the water system in an integrated assessment modeling framework for the first time ever. The team is working on extending the GCAM framework to reconcile water demands and supplies at the basin scale and to dynamically model the consequences of water scarcity on energy and land use decisions.

Acknowledgments

Sponsors: The U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science, Biological and Environmental Research Program, Integrated Assessment Research Program (IARP) and Earth System Modeling Program supported this research. Evergreen computing resources, which are also supported by the IARP, were used at PNNL's Joint Global Change Research Institute (JGCRI) at the University of Maryland in College Park. JGCRI is a partnership between PNNL and the University of Maryland.

Research Team: Mohamad Hejazi, James Edmonds, Leon Clarke, Page Kyle, Evan Davies, Vaibhav Chaturvedi, Marshall Wise, Pralit Patel, Jiyong Eom and Katherine Calvin at PNNL.

Research Area: Climate & Earth Systems Science

Reference: Hejazi M, J Edmonds, L Clarke, P Kyle, E Davies, V Chaturvedi, M Wise, P Patel, J Eom, and K Calvin. 2014. "Integrated Assessment of Global Water Scarcity over the 21st Century: Global Water Supply and Demand under Extreme Radiative Forcing." Hydrology and Earth System Sciences 18:2859-2883. DOI: 10.5194/hess-18-2859-2014.


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