4.6 Article

Effects of global irrigation on the near-surface climate

Journal

CLIMATE DYNAMICS
Volume 33, Issue 2-3, Pages 159-175

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00382-008-0445-z

Keywords

Irrigation; GCM; Agriculture; Land management

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship
  2. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Global Change Postdoctoral Program
  3. Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Studies student fellowship
  4. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Climate and Global Change Program
  5. National Science Foundation

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Irrigation delivers about 2,600 km(3) of water to the land surface each year, or about 2% of annual precipitation over land. We investigated how this redistribution of water affects the global climate, focusing on its effects on near-surface temperatures. Using the Community Atmosphere Model (CAM) coupled to the Community Land Model (CLM), we compared global simulations with and without irrigation. To approximate actual irrigation amounts and locations as closely as possible, we used national-level census data of agricultural water withdrawals, disaggregated with maps of croplands, areas equipped for irrigation, and climatic water deficits. We further investigated the sensitivity of our results to the timing and spatial extent of irrigation. We found that irrigation alters climate significantly in some regions, but has a negligible effect on global-average near-surface temperatures. Irrigation cooled the northern mid-latitudes; the central and southeast United States, portions of southeast China and portions of southern and southeast Asia cooled by similar to 0.5 K averaged over the year. Much of northern Canada, on the other hand, warmed by similar to 1 K. The cooling effect of irrigation seemed to be dominated by indirect effects like an increase in cloud cover, rather than by direct evaporative cooling. The regional effects of irrigation were as large as those seen in previous studies of land cover change, showing that changes in land management can be as important as changes in land cover in terms of their climatic effects. Our results were sensitive to the area of irrigation, but were insensitive to the details of irrigation timing and delivery.

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