Modeling Water Stress for Shared Water Resources

https://eos.org/research-spotlights/modeling-water-stress-for-shared-water-resources

Source: By Kate Wheeling, Eos/AGU. 

Excerpt: A third of the world’s population is living with high levels of water stress, according to the World Resources Institute [https://www.wri.org/blog/2019/08/17-countries-home-one-quarter-world-population-face-extremely-high-water-stress]. Reservoirs in major cities in India, South Africa, and elsewhere have nearly run dry because of ever increasing water demand, and climate change is expected to make these arid regions even drier. Researchers typically evaluate such factors as local climate, population, and resource management decisions to predict a region’s future water stress. But such predictions are especially complex in transboundary basins, where populations separated by national borders share the same water resources. ...Consider the Colorado River: The waterway flows across the U.S. Southwest, serving 35 million Americans, before flowing into Mexico. It used to carry 1,200 cubic meters of water per second across the border, but increasing demand in the United States and drought conditions have left the riverbed nearly dry in Mexico. ...upward of 2 billion people worldwide experience water stress for at least part of the year because of upstream water use. To investigate what future water stress might look like in these areas, Munia et al. [https://doi.org/10.1029/2019EF001321] used data on water availability, consumption, and population from global hydrological models run under various future greenhouse gas emission and socioeconomic scenarios. They found that under the best-case scenario, with low emissions and slow population growth, water stress in transboundary basins would increase by half by 2050, relative to stress in 2010. Under the business-as-usual scenario, with high emissions and population growth, water stress would double over the same time frame....

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