scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Climate and water: from climate models to water resources management and vice versa

Olli Varis, +2 more
- 01 Oct 2004 - 
- Vol. 66, Iss: 3, pp 321-344
TLDR
In this article, the authors review the recent developments in the functional chain from climate models to climate scenarios, through hydrology all the way to water resources management, design and policy making.
Abstract
This article reviews the recent developments in the functional chain from climate models to climate scenarios, through hydrology all the way to water resources management, design and policy making. Although climate models, such as Global Circulation Models (GCMs) continue to evolve, their outputs remain crude and often even inappropriate to watershed-scale hydrological analyses. The bridging techniques are evolving, though. Many families of regionalization technologies are under progress in parallel. Perhaps the most important advances are in the field of regional weather patterns, such as ENSO (El Nino-Southern Oscillation), NAO (North Atlantic Oscillation) and many more. The gap from hydrology to water resources development is by far not that wide. The traditional and contemporary practices are well in place. In climate change studies, the bottleneck is not in this link itself but in the climatic input. The tendency seems to be towards integrated water resources assessments, where climate is only one among many changes that are expected to occur, such as demography, land cover and land use, economy, technologies, and so forth. In such a pragmatic setting a risk–analytic interpretation of those scenarios is often called for. The above-outlined continuum from climate to water is a topic where the physically based modelers, the empiricists and the pragmatists should not get restricted to their own way of thinking. The issues should develop hand in hand. Perhaps the greatest challenge is to incorporate and respect the pragmatic policy-related component to the two other branches. For this purpose, it is helpful to reverse the direction of thinking from time to time to start—instead of climate models—from practical needs and think how the climate scenarios and models help really in the difficult task of designing better water structures, outline better policies and formulate better operational rules in the water field.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Bias correction of regional climate model simulations for hydrological climate-change impact studies: Review and evaluation of different methods

TL;DR: Despite the increasing use of regional climate model (RCM) simulations in hydrological climate-change impact studies, their application is challenging due to the risk of considerable biases as discussed by the authors, which makes it difficult to apply RMC simulations to the real world.
Journal ArticleDOI

“Panta Rhei—Everything Flows”: Change in hydrology and society—The IAHS Scientific Decade 2013–2022

Alberto Montanari, +36 more
TL;DR: The Panta Rhei Everything Flows project as mentioned in this paper is dedicated to research activities on change in hydrology and society, which aims to reach an improved interpretation of the processes governing the water cycle by focusing on their changing dynamics in connection with rapidly changing human systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Assessing climate change impacts on hydrology from an ensemble of regional climate models, model scales and linking methods - a case study on the Lule River basin

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated how using different regional climate model (RCM) simulations affects climate change impacts on hydrology in northern Europe using an offline hydrological model.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of hydrological impacts of climate change simulated by six hydrological models in the Dongjiang Basin, South China

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the impacts of human-induced climate change on the water availability in the Dongjiang basin, South China, using six monthly water balance models, namely the Thornthwaite-Mather (TM), Vrije Universitet Brussel (VUB), Xinanjiang (XAJ), Guo (GM), WatBal (WM), and Schaake (SM) models.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Modeling the Exchanges of Energy, Water, and Carbon Between Continents and the Atmosphere

TL;DR: Modern schemes incorporate biogeochemical and ecological knowledge and, when coupled with advanced climate and ocean models, will be capable of modeling the biological and physical responses of the Earth system to global change, for example, increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stochastic simulation of daily precipitation, temperature, and solar radiation

TL;DR: In this article, a Markov chain-exponential model is used to generate daily precipitation, maximum temperature, minimum temperature, and solar radiation, which are then used to evaluate the long-term effects of proposed hydrologic changes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Efficient Three-Dimensional Global Models for Climate Studies: Models I and II

TL;DR: In this article, a grid-point model based on numerical solution of the fundamental equations for atmospheric structure and motion is presented, which permits the explicit modeling of physical processes in the climate system and the natural treatment of interactions and feedbacks among parts of the system.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transient Responses of a Coupled Ocean–Atmosphere Model to Gradual Changes of Atmospheric CO2. Part I. Annual Mean Response

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the response of a climate model to a gradual increase or decrease of atmospheric carbon dioxide in a general circulation model of the coupled atmosphere-ocean-land surface system with global geography and seasonal variation of insulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Water vapor feedback and global warming

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe the background behind the prevailing view on water vapor feedback and some of the arguments raised by its critics, and attempt to explain why these arguments have not modified the consensus within the climate research community.
Related Papers (5)