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The Irony of Global Warming: More Rain, Less Water
By Robert Roy
Britt, LiveScience Managing Editor
Even though a warmer planet is expected to bring more precipitation, we humans may not be
able to capture enough of it.
As the climate warms, more water will fall in the form of rain rather than snow, studies have
shown. New modeling details how reservoirs will fill earlier than normal, and
how snow will melt earlier in the year, altering the timing of runoff that water
officials count on in many major reservoir systems.
"When you change the seasonality of how rivers flow you are essentially
putting the water runoff all into spring rather than being able to draw it out
through summer," says Tim Barnett of the Scripps Institution of
Oceanography. "Mother Nature is not going to act like a reservoir as it has
in the past and when the water comes out all at once there isn't enough capacity
to contain it."
Systems that can't hold an entire season of runoff all at once will be
challenged to meet the demands of their water customers.
The idea that global warming will bring more rain and less snow goes back to
at least 1999, when a University of California, Santa Barbara researcher said
"There will be too much water at the wrong time and too little when we need
it."
Water available for human use from
California
's
Sierra Nevada
mountains could be reduced by 15 to 30 percent, Barnett and his colleagues
showed in a previous study. They've now applied their model to other regions.
Earlier spring water runoff will threaten agricultural production in the
Canadian Prairies. In Europe, peak water availability in the
Rhine
River Basin
may be reduced, affecting industry, agriculture and residents.
Shipping, flood protection, hydropower generation and revenue from skiing
all could be threatened, the scientists say.
"Even more serious problems may occur" in regions dependent on
glaciers, Barnett and his colleagues write in today's issue of the journal Nature,
"because once the glaciers have melted in a warmer world, there will be no
replacement for the water they now provide."
Other studies have revealed alarming retreats of glaciers in Greenland and
Antarctica
, in both cases
attributed to warmer climates.
"At current rates some of the glaciers may disappear in a few decades,
if not sooner," Barnett's team writes. Large numbers of people could be
affected by melting glaciers in
South America
,
China
,
India
and other parts of
Asia
, they conclude.
Published
by: http://www.livescience.com/environment/051116_water_shortage.html
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