Climate change and its effect on agriculture, water resources and human health sectors in Poland

Multi-model ensemble climate projections in the ENSEMBLES Project of the EU allowed the authors to quantify selected extreme-weather indices for Poland, of importance to climate impacts on systems and sectors. Among indices were: number of days in a year with high value of the heat index; with high...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: M. Szwed, G. Karg, I. Pińskwar, M. Radziejewski, D. Graczyk, A. Kędziora, Z. W. Kundzewicz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2010-08-01
Series:Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences
Online Access:http://www.nat-hazards-earth-syst-sci.net/10/1725/2010/nhess-10-1725-2010.pdf
id doaj-399fd699b70e470ab0f149e00a09843d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-399fd699b70e470ab0f149e00a09843d2020-11-24T23:47:28ZengCopernicus PublicationsNatural Hazards and Earth System Sciences1561-86331684-99812010-08-011081725173710.5194/nhess-10-1725-2010Climate change and its effect on agriculture, water resources and human health sectors in PolandM. SzwedG. KargI. PińskwarM. RadziejewskiD. GraczykA. KędzioraZ. W. KundzewiczMulti-model ensemble climate projections in the ENSEMBLES Project of the EU allowed the authors to quantify selected extreme-weather indices for Poland, of importance to climate impacts on systems and sectors. Among indices were: number of days in a year with high value of the heat index; with high maximum and minimum temperatures; length of vegetation period; and number of consecutive dry days. Agricultural, hydrological, and human health indices were applied to evaluate the changing risk of weather extremes in Poland in three sectors. To achieve this, model-based simulations were compared for two time horizons, a century apart, i.e., 1961–1990 and 2061–2090. Climate changes, and in particular increases in temperature and changes in rainfall, have strong impacts on agriculture via weather extremes – droughts and heat waves. The crop yield depends particularly on water availability in the plant development phase. To estimate the changes in present and future yield of two crops important for Polish agriculture i.e., potatoes and wheat, some simple empirical models were used. For these crops, decrease of yield is projected for most of the country, with national means of yield change being: –2.175 t/ha for potatoes and –0.539 t/ha for wheat. Already now, in most of Poland, evapotranspiration exceeds precipitation during summer, hence the water storage (in surface water bodies, soil and ground) decreases. Summer precipitation deficit is projected to increase considerably in the future. The additional water supplies (above precipitation) needed to use the agro-potential of the environment would increase by half. Analysis of water balance components (now and in the projected future) can corroborate such conclusions. As regards climate and health, a composite index, proposed in this paper, is a product of the number of senior discomfort days and the number of seniors (aged 65+). The value of this index is projected to increase over 8-fold during 100 years. This is an effect of both increase in the number of seniors (over twofold) and the number of senior-discomfort days (nearly fourfold). http://www.nat-hazards-earth-syst-sci.net/10/1725/2010/nhess-10-1725-2010.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author M. Szwed
G. Karg
I. Pińskwar
M. Radziejewski
D. Graczyk
A. Kędziora
Z. W. Kundzewicz
spellingShingle M. Szwed
G. Karg
I. Pińskwar
M. Radziejewski
D. Graczyk
A. Kędziora
Z. W. Kundzewicz
Climate change and its effect on agriculture, water resources and human health sectors in Poland
Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences
author_facet M. Szwed
G. Karg
I. Pińskwar
M. Radziejewski
D. Graczyk
A. Kędziora
Z. W. Kundzewicz
author_sort M. Szwed
title Climate change and its effect on agriculture, water resources and human health sectors in Poland
title_short Climate change and its effect on agriculture, water resources and human health sectors in Poland
title_full Climate change and its effect on agriculture, water resources and human health sectors in Poland
title_fullStr Climate change and its effect on agriculture, water resources and human health sectors in Poland
title_full_unstemmed Climate change and its effect on agriculture, water resources and human health sectors in Poland
title_sort climate change and its effect on agriculture, water resources and human health sectors in poland
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences
issn 1561-8633
1684-9981
publishDate 2010-08-01
description Multi-model ensemble climate projections in the ENSEMBLES Project of the EU allowed the authors to quantify selected extreme-weather indices for Poland, of importance to climate impacts on systems and sectors. Among indices were: number of days in a year with high value of the heat index; with high maximum and minimum temperatures; length of vegetation period; and number of consecutive dry days. Agricultural, hydrological, and human health indices were applied to evaluate the changing risk of weather extremes in Poland in three sectors. To achieve this, model-based simulations were compared for two time horizons, a century apart, i.e., 1961–1990 and 2061–2090. Climate changes, and in particular increases in temperature and changes in rainfall, have strong impacts on agriculture via weather extremes – droughts and heat waves. The crop yield depends particularly on water availability in the plant development phase. To estimate the changes in present and future yield of two crops important for Polish agriculture i.e., potatoes and wheat, some simple empirical models were used. For these crops, decrease of yield is projected for most of the country, with national means of yield change being: –2.175 t/ha for potatoes and –0.539 t/ha for wheat. Already now, in most of Poland, evapotranspiration exceeds precipitation during summer, hence the water storage (in surface water bodies, soil and ground) decreases. Summer precipitation deficit is projected to increase considerably in the future. The additional water supplies (above precipitation) needed to use the agro-potential of the environment would increase by half. Analysis of water balance components (now and in the projected future) can corroborate such conclusions. As regards climate and health, a composite index, proposed in this paper, is a product of the number of senior discomfort days and the number of seniors (aged 65+). The value of this index is projected to increase over 8-fold during 100 years. This is an effect of both increase in the number of seniors (over twofold) and the number of senior-discomfort days (nearly fourfold).
url http://www.nat-hazards-earth-syst-sci.net/10/1725/2010/nhess-10-1725-2010.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT mszwed climatechangeanditseffectonagriculturewaterresourcesandhumanhealthsectorsinpoland
AT gkarg climatechangeanditseffectonagriculturewaterresourcesandhumanhealthsectorsinpoland
AT ipinskwar climatechangeanditseffectonagriculturewaterresourcesandhumanhealthsectorsinpoland
AT mradziejewski climatechangeanditseffectonagriculturewaterresourcesandhumanhealthsectorsinpoland
AT dgraczyk climatechangeanditseffectonagriculturewaterresourcesandhumanhealthsectorsinpoland
AT akedziora climatechangeanditseffectonagriculturewaterresourcesandhumanhealthsectorsinpoland
AT zwkundzewicz climatechangeanditseffectonagriculturewaterresourcesandhumanhealthsectorsinpoland
_version_ 1725489473748205568