4.7 Article

Low flow sensitivity to water withdrawals in Central and Southwestern Europe under 2 K global warming

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 18, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/acec60

Keywords

low flows; hydrology; water use; water demand; climate change; pseudo global warming

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Adequate freshwater supply is crucial, yet it will be significantly affected by climate and socio-economic changes. A new hydrological modeling experiment reveals that water withdrawal assumptions in low flow periods can have a major impact, particularly in Western and Central Europe.
A sufficient freshwater supply is vital for humans, ecosystems, and economies, but anticipated climate and socio-economic change are expected to substantially alter water availability. Across Europe, about two-third of the abstracted freshwater comes from rivers and streams. Various hydrological studies address the resulting need for projections on changes in river discharge. However, those assessments rarely specifically account for the impact of various water withdrawal scenarios during low flow periods. We present here a novel, high-resolution hydrological modeling experiment using pseudo-global warming climate data to investigate the effects of changing water withdrawals under 2 K global warming. Especially in Western and Central Europe the projected impacts on low flows highly depend on the chosen water withdrawal assumption and can severely decrease under the worst case assumptions. Our results highlight the importance of accounting for future water withdrawals in low flow projections, showing that climate-focused impact assessments in near-natural catchments provide only one piece of the anticipated response and do not necessarily reflect changes in heavily managed river basins.

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