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Global terrestrial water storage and drought severity under climate change

Authors :
Camelia Eliza Telteu
Jacob Schewe
Anne Gädeke
Tobias Stacke
Aristeidis Koutroulis
Hyungjun Kim
Lukas Gudmundsson
Dieter Gerten
Julien Boulange
Wim Thiery
Hannes Müller Schmied
Lamprini Papadimitriou
Naota Hanasaki
Yoshihide Wada
Farshid Felfelani
Fang Zhao
Peter Burek
Junguo Liu
Manolis Grillakis
Simon N. Gosling
Yusuke Satoh
Yadu Pokhrel
Ted Veldkamp
Water and Climate Risk
Hydrology and Hydraulic Engineering
Source :
Pokhrel, Y.; Felfelani, F.; Satoh, Y.; Boulange, J.; Burek, P.; Gädeke, A.; Gerten, D.; Gosling, S.N.; Grillakis, M.; Gudmundsson, L.; Hanasaki, N.; Kim, H.; Koutroulis, A.; Liu, J.; Papadimitriou, L.; Schewe, J.; Müller Schmied, H.; Stacke, T.; Telteu, C.-E.; Thiery, W.; Veldkamp, T.; Zhao, F.; Wada, Y.: Global terrestrial water storage and drought severity under climate change. In: Nature Climate Change. Vol. 11 (2021) 3, 226-233. (DOI: /10.1038/s41558-020-00972-w), Nature Climate Change, 11(3), 226-233. Nature Publishing Group, Pokhrel, Y, Felfelani, F, Satoh, Y, Boulange, J, Burek, P, Gädeke, A, Gerten, D, Gosling, S N, Grillakis, M, Gudmundsson, L, Hanasaki, N, Kim, H, Koutroulis, A, Liu, J, Papadimitriou, L, Schewe, J, Müller Schmied, H, Stacke, T, Telteu, C E, Thiery, W, Veldkamp, T, Zhao, F & Wada, Y 2021, ' Global terrestrial water storage and drought severity under climate change ', Nature Climate Change, vol. 11, no. 3, pp. 226-233 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-020-00972-w, Nature Climate Change, 11 (3)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2021.

Abstract

Terrestrial water storage (TWS) modulates the hydrological cycle and is a key determinant of water availability and an indicator of drought. While historical TWS variations have been increasingly studied, future changes in TWS and the linkages to droughts remain unexamined. Here, using ensemble hydrological simulations, we show that climate change could reduce TWS in many regions, especially those in the Southern Hemisphere. Strong inter-ensemble agreement indicates high confidence in the projected changes that are driven primarily by climate forcing rather than land and water management activities. Declines in TWS translate to increases in future droughts. By the late twenty-first century, the global land area and population in extreme-to-exceptional TWS drought could more than double, each increasing from 3% during 1976–2005 to 7% and 8%, respectively. Our findings highlight the importance of climate change mitigation to avoid adverse TWS impacts and increased droughts, and the need for improved water resource management and adaptation.<br />Terrestrial water storage (TWS) modulates the hydrological cycle and is a key determinant of water availability and an indicator of drought. While historical TWS variations have been increasingly studied, future changes in TWS and the linkages to droughts remain unexamined. Here, using ensemble hydrological simulations, we show that climate change could reduce TWS in many regions, especially those in the Southern Hemisphere. Strong inter-ensemble agreement indicates high confidence in the projected changes that are driven primarily by climate forcing rather than land and water management activities. Declines in TWS translate to increases in future droughts. By the late twenty-first century, the global land area and population in extreme-to-exceptional TWS drought could more than double, each increasing from 3% during 1976–2005 to 7% and 8%, respectively. Our findings highlight the importance of climate change mitigation to avoid adverse TWS impacts and increased droughts, and the need for improved water resource management and adaptation. © 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17586798 and 1758678X
Volume :
11
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Climate Change
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....69a9acf8b37f0b030099f67e8e27f0c8