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Influence of internal variability on population exposure to hydroclimatic changes

Future freshwater supply, human water demand, and people’s exposure to water stress are subject to multiple sources of uncertainty, including unknown future pathways of fossil fuel and water consumption, and ‘irreducible’ uncertainty arising from internal climate system variability. Such internal va...

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Autores principales: Mankin, Justin S, Viviroli, Daniel, Mekonnen, Mesfin M, Hoekstra, Arjen Y, Horton, Radley M, Smerdon, Jason E, Diffenbaugh, Noah S
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7446950/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32849911
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/aa5efc
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author Mankin, Justin S
Viviroli, Daniel
Mekonnen, Mesfin M
Hoekstra, Arjen Y
Horton, Radley M
Smerdon, Jason E
Diffenbaugh, Noah S
author_facet Mankin, Justin S
Viviroli, Daniel
Mekonnen, Mesfin M
Hoekstra, Arjen Y
Horton, Radley M
Smerdon, Jason E
Diffenbaugh, Noah S
author_sort Mankin, Justin S
collection PubMed
description Future freshwater supply, human water demand, and people’s exposure to water stress are subject to multiple sources of uncertainty, including unknown future pathways of fossil fuel and water consumption, and ‘irreducible’ uncertainty arising from internal climate system variability. Such internal variability can conceal forced hydroclimatic changes on multi-decadal timescales and near-continental spatial-scales. Using three projections of population growth, a large ensemble from a single Earth system model, and assuming stationary per capita water consumption, we quantify the likelihoods of future population exposure to increased hydroclimatic deficits, which we define as the average duration and magnitude by which evapotranspiration exceeds precipitation in a basin. We calculate that by 2060, ~31%–35% of the global population will be exposed to >50% probability of hydroclimatic deficit increases that exceed existing hydrological storage, with up to 9% of people exposed to >90% probability. However, internal variability, which is an irreducible uncertainty in climate model predictions that is under-sampled in water resource projections, creates substantial uncertainty in predicted exposure: ~86%–91% of people will reside where irreducible uncertainty spans the potential for both increases and decreases in sub-annual water deficits. In one population scenario, changes in exposure to large hydroclimate deficits vary from −3% to +6% of global population, a range arising entirely from internal variability. The uncertainty in risk arising from irreducible uncertainty in the precise pattern of hydroclimatic change, which is typically conflated with other uncertainties in projections, is critical for climate risk management that seeks to optimize adaptations that are robust to the full set of potential real-world outcomes.
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spelling pubmed-74469502020-08-25 Influence of internal variability on population exposure to hydroclimatic changes Mankin, Justin S Viviroli, Daniel Mekonnen, Mesfin M Hoekstra, Arjen Y Horton, Radley M Smerdon, Jason E Diffenbaugh, Noah S Environ Res Lett Article Future freshwater supply, human water demand, and people’s exposure to water stress are subject to multiple sources of uncertainty, including unknown future pathways of fossil fuel and water consumption, and ‘irreducible’ uncertainty arising from internal climate system variability. Such internal variability can conceal forced hydroclimatic changes on multi-decadal timescales and near-continental spatial-scales. Using three projections of population growth, a large ensemble from a single Earth system model, and assuming stationary per capita water consumption, we quantify the likelihoods of future population exposure to increased hydroclimatic deficits, which we define as the average duration and magnitude by which evapotranspiration exceeds precipitation in a basin. We calculate that by 2060, ~31%–35% of the global population will be exposed to >50% probability of hydroclimatic deficit increases that exceed existing hydrological storage, with up to 9% of people exposed to >90% probability. However, internal variability, which is an irreducible uncertainty in climate model predictions that is under-sampled in water resource projections, creates substantial uncertainty in predicted exposure: ~86%–91% of people will reside where irreducible uncertainty spans the potential for both increases and decreases in sub-annual water deficits. In one population scenario, changes in exposure to large hydroclimate deficits vary from −3% to +6% of global population, a range arising entirely from internal variability. The uncertainty in risk arising from irreducible uncertainty in the precise pattern of hydroclimatic change, which is typically conflated with other uncertainties in projections, is critical for climate risk management that seeks to optimize adaptations that are robust to the full set of potential real-world outcomes. 2017-03-28 2017-04 /pmc/articles/PMC7446950/ /pubmed/32849911 http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/aa5efc Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 licence.
spellingShingle Article
Mankin, Justin S
Viviroli, Daniel
Mekonnen, Mesfin M
Hoekstra, Arjen Y
Horton, Radley M
Smerdon, Jason E
Diffenbaugh, Noah S
Influence of internal variability on population exposure to hydroclimatic changes
title Influence of internal variability on population exposure to hydroclimatic changes
title_full Influence of internal variability on population exposure to hydroclimatic changes
title_fullStr Influence of internal variability on population exposure to hydroclimatic changes
title_full_unstemmed Influence of internal variability on population exposure to hydroclimatic changes
title_short Influence of internal variability on population exposure to hydroclimatic changes
title_sort influence of internal variability on population exposure to hydroclimatic changes
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7446950/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32849911
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/aa5efc
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