The Resilience of Inter-basin Transfers to Severe Droughts With Changing Spatial Characteristics

Faced with the prospect of climate change and growing demands for water, water resources managers are increasingly examining the potential for inter-basin water transfers to alleviate water shortages. However, water transfers are vulnerable to large-scale spatially coherent droughts which may lead t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Anna Murgatroyd, Jim W. Hall
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Environmental Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fenvs.2020.571647/full
id doaj-2b48615844ec4530b7046776934bc563
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2b48615844ec4530b7046776934bc5632020-12-28T08:41:22ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Environmental Science2296-665X2020-12-01810.3389/fenvs.2020.571647571647The Resilience of Inter-basin Transfers to Severe Droughts With Changing Spatial CharacteristicsAnna MurgatroydJim W. HallFaced with the prospect of climate change and growing demands for water, water resources managers are increasingly examining the potential for inter-basin water transfers to alleviate water shortages. However, water transfers are vulnerable to large-scale spatially coherent droughts which may lead to water shortages in neighboring river basins at the same time. Under climate change, increasingly severe droughts are also expected to have greater spatial extent. We have integrated climate, hydrological and water resource modeling to explore the resilience of new transfer schemes between two neighboring water companies in Southern England. An extended historical record of river flows and large ensemble of future flows derived from climate simulations were used to explore the effects of spatial and temporal drought variability. The analysis examines meteorological, hydrological and water resource drought events and how the spatial characteristics of these droughts may change with different transfer arrangements. Results indicate that all drought types examined are expected to increase in frequency and intensity throughout the twenty-first century, but a new transfer has the capability to increase the resilience of water supplies. The analysis also highlights the importance of testing new water infrastructure against drought events that are more extreme and have different spatial patterns to those in historical records, demonstrating the value of scenario-based approaches to adaptive water resource planning.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fenvs.2020.571647/fulldroughtwater managementhydrologywater transfersclimate resilience
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anna Murgatroyd
Jim W. Hall
spellingShingle Anna Murgatroyd
Jim W. Hall
The Resilience of Inter-basin Transfers to Severe Droughts With Changing Spatial Characteristics
Frontiers in Environmental Science
drought
water management
hydrology
water transfers
climate resilience
author_facet Anna Murgatroyd
Jim W. Hall
author_sort Anna Murgatroyd
title The Resilience of Inter-basin Transfers to Severe Droughts With Changing Spatial Characteristics
title_short The Resilience of Inter-basin Transfers to Severe Droughts With Changing Spatial Characteristics
title_full The Resilience of Inter-basin Transfers to Severe Droughts With Changing Spatial Characteristics
title_fullStr The Resilience of Inter-basin Transfers to Severe Droughts With Changing Spatial Characteristics
title_full_unstemmed The Resilience of Inter-basin Transfers to Severe Droughts With Changing Spatial Characteristics
title_sort resilience of inter-basin transfers to severe droughts with changing spatial characteristics
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Environmental Science
issn 2296-665X
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Faced with the prospect of climate change and growing demands for water, water resources managers are increasingly examining the potential for inter-basin water transfers to alleviate water shortages. However, water transfers are vulnerable to large-scale spatially coherent droughts which may lead to water shortages in neighboring river basins at the same time. Under climate change, increasingly severe droughts are also expected to have greater spatial extent. We have integrated climate, hydrological and water resource modeling to explore the resilience of new transfer schemes between two neighboring water companies in Southern England. An extended historical record of river flows and large ensemble of future flows derived from climate simulations were used to explore the effects of spatial and temporal drought variability. The analysis examines meteorological, hydrological and water resource drought events and how the spatial characteristics of these droughts may change with different transfer arrangements. Results indicate that all drought types examined are expected to increase in frequency and intensity throughout the twenty-first century, but a new transfer has the capability to increase the resilience of water supplies. The analysis also highlights the importance of testing new water infrastructure against drought events that are more extreme and have different spatial patterns to those in historical records, demonstrating the value of scenario-based approaches to adaptive water resource planning.
topic drought
water management
hydrology
water transfers
climate resilience
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fenvs.2020.571647/full
work_keys_str_mv AT annamurgatroyd theresilienceofinterbasintransferstoseveredroughtswithchangingspatialcharacteristics
AT jimwhall theresilienceofinterbasintransferstoseveredroughtswithchangingspatialcharacteristics
AT annamurgatroyd resilienceofinterbasintransferstoseveredroughtswithchangingspatialcharacteristics
AT jimwhall resilienceofinterbasintransferstoseveredroughtswithchangingspatialcharacteristics
_version_ 1724368802161885184