Physical Impacts of Climate Change on Water Resources

Despite the well-recognized role of water in transmitting climate impacts to some of the growth drivers of the economy, the water sector has been largely ignored in climate change deliberations. The impacts are projected to vary regionally, and are...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Miralles-Wilhelm, Fernando, Clarke, Leon, Hejazi, Mohamad, Kim, Sonny, Gustafson, Kelly, Munoz-Castillo, Raul, Graham, Neal
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/137141486625149687/Physical-impacts-of-climate-change-on-water-resources
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26028
id okr-10986-26028
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-260282021-05-25T08:57:24Z Physical Impacts of Climate Change on Water Resources Miralles-Wilhelm, Fernando Clarke, Leon Hejazi, Mohamad Kim, Sonny Gustafson, Kelly Munoz-Castillo, Raul Graham, Neal WATER RESOURCES INTEGRATED ASSESSMENT WATER SUPPLY CLIMATE CHANGE ENERGY WATER SECURITY AGRICULTURE IRRIGATION water scarcity water flow climate change mitigation Despite the well-recognized role of water in transmitting climate impacts to some of the growth drivers of the economy, the water sector has been largely ignored in climate change deliberations. The impacts are projected to vary regionally, and are likely to include changes in average hydroclimate patterns (precipitation, surface runoff, and stream flow), as well as increases in the probability of extreme events. Climate shocks are likely to impose higher costs than gradual changes in climate averages. Prudent management of water resources will be pivotal in addressing the climate challenge—both for adapting to the effects of climate change as well as for meeting global greenhouse gas mitigation goals. The precise consequences of climate change on the hydrological cycle are uncertain, which makes adaptation especially challenging. Uncertainty regarding impacts is partly a consequence of the limitations of climate models. Despite improvements in climate science, the Global Circulation Models developed to project climate futures generate a wide range of projections that often disagree on both the direction and magnitude of precipitation changes. Furthermore, these models have not been designed to predict changes in the hydrological cycle and lack the precision required for planning and managing water resources. In addition to this, changes in the hydrological cycle imply that future water systems may not resemble the past (non-stationarity), so historic trends as used in engineering designs, no longer serve as a reliable guide for assessing and managing future risks. This study presents an investigation of the impacts of climate change on water resources throughout the world, and specific effects on water dependent sectors of the economy such as urban, energy, and agriculture. The results can be used to illustrate the centrality of water in achieving global climate change goals. 2017-02-09T18:12:57Z 2017-02-09T18:12:57Z 2017-02-08 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/137141486625149687/Physical-impacts-of-climate-change-on-water-resources http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26028 English en_US Discussion Paper; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Working Paper
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic WATER RESOURCES
INTEGRATED ASSESSMENT
WATER SUPPLY
CLIMATE CHANGE
ENERGY
WATER SECURITY
AGRICULTURE
IRRIGATION
water scarcity
water flow
climate change mitigation
spellingShingle WATER RESOURCES
INTEGRATED ASSESSMENT
WATER SUPPLY
CLIMATE CHANGE
ENERGY
WATER SECURITY
AGRICULTURE
IRRIGATION
water scarcity
water flow
climate change mitigation
Miralles-Wilhelm, Fernando
Clarke, Leon
Hejazi, Mohamad
Kim, Sonny
Gustafson, Kelly
Munoz-Castillo, Raul
Graham, Neal
Physical Impacts of Climate Change on Water Resources
relation Discussion Paper;
description Despite the well-recognized role of water in transmitting climate impacts to some of the growth drivers of the economy, the water sector has been largely ignored in climate change deliberations. The impacts are projected to vary regionally, and are likely to include changes in average hydroclimate patterns (precipitation, surface runoff, and stream flow), as well as increases in the probability of extreme events. Climate shocks are likely to impose higher costs than gradual changes in climate averages. Prudent management of water resources will be pivotal in addressing the climate challenge—both for adapting to the effects of climate change as well as for meeting global greenhouse gas mitigation goals. The precise consequences of climate change on the hydrological cycle are uncertain, which makes adaptation especially challenging. Uncertainty regarding impacts is partly a consequence of the limitations of climate models. Despite improvements in climate science, the Global Circulation Models developed to project climate futures generate a wide range of projections that often disagree on both the direction and magnitude of precipitation changes. Furthermore, these models have not been designed to predict changes in the hydrological cycle and lack the precision required for planning and managing water resources. In addition to this, changes in the hydrological cycle imply that future water systems may not resemble the past (non-stationarity), so historic trends as used in engineering designs, no longer serve as a reliable guide for assessing and managing future risks. This study presents an investigation of the impacts of climate change on water resources throughout the world, and specific effects on water dependent sectors of the economy such as urban, energy, and agriculture. The results can be used to illustrate the centrality of water in achieving global climate change goals.
format Working Paper
author Miralles-Wilhelm, Fernando
Clarke, Leon
Hejazi, Mohamad
Kim, Sonny
Gustafson, Kelly
Munoz-Castillo, Raul
Graham, Neal
author_facet Miralles-Wilhelm, Fernando
Clarke, Leon
Hejazi, Mohamad
Kim, Sonny
Gustafson, Kelly
Munoz-Castillo, Raul
Graham, Neal
author_sort Miralles-Wilhelm, Fernando
title Physical Impacts of Climate Change on Water Resources
title_short Physical Impacts of Climate Change on Water Resources
title_full Physical Impacts of Climate Change on Water Resources
title_fullStr Physical Impacts of Climate Change on Water Resources
title_full_unstemmed Physical Impacts of Climate Change on Water Resources
title_sort physical impacts of climate change on water resources
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2017
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/137141486625149687/Physical-impacts-of-climate-change-on-water-resources
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26028
_version_ 1764460758682304512