4.6 Article

Analysis of Climate Change Impacts on Agricultural Water Availability in Cimanuk Watershed, Indonesia

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 14, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su142316236

Keywords

climate change; GCM; RCPs4; 5; stream model; agricultural water balance

Funding

  1. FAO
  2. [TFJP110014404]

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This study analyzed the impact of climate change on agricultural water availability in Cimanuk Watershed, Indonesia. The results indicated a decreasing trend in water availability from all generated climate data and scenarios. However, a specific scenario showed an increasing trend in the maximum discharge of Cimanuk river.
Climate change has been affecting agricultural water resources dynamics spatially and temporally. This article presents analysis results of climate change impact on agricultural water availability in Cimanuk Watershed, Indonesia. STREAM was utilized to model agricultural water availability through FAO MOSAICC web application. Climate spatial data time-series were generated using 3 Global Climate Model (GCM), i.e.,: CanESM2, CNRM-CM5, and MPI-ESM-MR following two climate change scenarios of RCP4.5 and 8.5. Model inputs were split into three periods of 1981-2010 (historical), 2010-2039 (near-future), and 2040-2069 (far-future). Historical data model validation showed the efficiency coefficient of the observed and simulated discharge data ratio was 0.68. The results showed a decreasing volumetric water availability from all generated climate data and scenarios, identified by comparing the discharge normal distribution of the historical and future data periods. Whereas, trend analysis of RCP4.5 scenario showed increasing maximum discharge of Cimanuk river using CanESM2 and MPI-ESM-MR GCM's data, with a Mann-Kendall coefficient of 3.23 and 3.57. These results indicate a different agricultural water balance status within the watershed area, particularly a very critical water balance in Indramayu and Majalengka, critical in Garut, and close to critical in Sumedang Regency.

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