Global Climate Change
Global Climate Change
Global
climate change has already had observable effects on the environment. Glaciers
have shrunk, ice on rivers and lakes is breaking up earlier, plant and animal
ranges have shifted and trees are flowering sooner.
The
study – part of a five-year research project on four continents, the first to
take a close look at 10 river basins - is based on data from 17 climate models
used by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) to examine the
potential effect of changing temperatures and rainfall patterns on the water
flows in rivers from now until 2050. Mark Mulligan, a leading author of the
study, has opined that climate models cannot predict how rainfall patterns will
behave in future with a high degree of certainty: “What we do know is that we cannot
be confident about hydrological stability. Some rivers could become wetter and
then drier, or vice versa. The key message to countries is: ‘Become more
adaptable’.”
In
Asia the seasonality of changes in rainfall and temperature - which affects how
rivers behave in the wet or dry season - will be critical, especially in wet
basins like the Mekong. Mulligan drew parallels with the uncertainty of the
current financial crisis, pointing out that unprepared institutions and experts
were responding in crisis mode. He said their findings on the impact of climate
change on river basins indicate that the world faces an uncertain future
regarding water, and the impact was unpredictable. A framework is needed to
plan a strategy for the better management of water, and make countries and
people more resilient.
Below
are some of the regional impacts of global change forecast by the IPCC:
North
America: Decreasing snowpack in the western mountains; 5-20 percent
increase in yields of rain-fed agriculture in some regions; increased
frequency, intensity and duration of heat waves in cities that currently
experience them.
Latin
America: Gradual replacement of tropical forest by savannah in eastern
Amazonia; risk of significant biodiversity loss through species extinction in
many tropical areas; significant changes in water availability for human
consumption, agriculture and energy generation.
Europe: Increased
risk of inland flash floods; more frequent coastal flooding and increased
erosion from storms and sea level rise; glacial retreat in mountainous areas;
reduced snow cover and winter tourism; extensive species losses; reductions of
crop productivity in southern Europe.
Africa: By
2020, between 75 and 250 million people are projected to be exposed to
increased water stress; yields from rain-fed agriculture could be reduced by up
to 50 percent in some regions by 2020; agricultural production, including
access to food, may be severely compromised.
Asia: Freshwater
availability projected to decrease in Central, South, East and Southeast Asia
by the 2050s; coastal areas will be at risk due to increased flooding; death
rate from disease associated with floods and droughts expected to rise in some
regions.
#FlashFloods #Freshwater #NorthAmerica #Central #EnergyGeneration #SouthernEurope #LatinAmerica #ClimateChange
#FlashFloods #Freshwater #NorthAmerica #Central #EnergyGeneration #SouthernEurope #LatinAmerica #ClimateChange
http://climate.nasa.gov/effects
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