4.3.9. Changes in Hydrological Drought Frequency
Droughts are considerably more difficult to define in quantitative terms than
floods. Droughts may be expressed in terms of rainfall deficits, soil moisture
deficits, lack of flow in a river, low groundwater levels, or low reservoir
levels; different definitions are used in different sectors. A hydrological
drought occurs when river or groundwater levels are low, and a water resources
drought occurs when low river, groundwater, or reservoir levels impact water
use. Low river flows in summer may not necessarily create a water resources
drought, for example, if reservoirs are full after winter; conversely, a short-lived
summer flood may not end a water resources drought caused by a prolonged lack
of reservoir inflows. Water resources droughts therefore depend not only on
the climatic and hydrological inputs but critically on the characteristics of
the water resource system and how droughts are managed. This section focuses
on hydrological drought, particularly on low river flows. Different studies
have used different indices of low river flows, including the magnitude of minimum
flows, the frequency at which flows fall below some threshold, the duration
of flow below a threshold, and the cumulative difference between actual flows
and some defined threshold.
At the global scale, Arnell (1999b) explored the change in the minimum annual
total runoff with a return period of 10 years under several scenarios, based
on HadCM2 and HadCM3 GCMs. He shows that the pattern of this measure of low
flow (which is relatively crude) changes in a similar way to average annual
runoff (as shown in Figure 4-1) but that the percentage
changes tend to be larger. Arnell (1999a) mapped a different index of low flow
across Europethe average summed difference between streamflow and the
flow exceeded 95% of the time, while flows are below this thresholdunder
four scenarios. The results suggest a reduction in the magnitude of low flows
under most scenarios across much of western Europe, as a result of lower flows
during summer, but an amelioration of low flows in the east because of increased
winter flows. In these regions, however, the season of lowest flows tends to
shift from the current winter low-flow season toward summer.
Döll et al. (1999) also modeled global runoff at a spatial resolution
of 0.5°x0.5°, not only for average climatic conditions but also for
typical dry years. The annual runoff exceeded in 9 years out of 10 (the 10-year
return period drought runoff) was derived for each of more than
1,000 river basins covering the whole globe. Then the impact of climate change
on these runoff values was computed by scaling observed temperature and precipitation
in the 1-in-10 dry years with climate scenarios of two different GCMs (Chapter
3), ECHAM4/OPYC3 and GFDL-R15. Climate variability was assumed to remain constant.
For the same GHG emission scenario, IS92a, the two GCMs compute quite different
temperature and more so precipitation changes. With the GFDL scenario, runoff
in 2025 and 2075 is simulated to be higher in most river basins than with the
ECHAM scenario. The 1-in-10 dry year runoff is computed to decrease between
the present time (19611990 climate) and 2075 by more than 10% on 19% (ECHAM)
or 13% (GFDL) of the global land area (Table 4-4)
and to increase by more than 50% on 22% (ECHAM) or 49% (GFDL) of the global
land area. These results underline the high sensitivity of computed future runoff
changes to GCM calculations.
There have been several other studies into changes in low flow indicators at
the catchment scale. Gellens and Roulin (1998), for example, simulated changes
in low flows in several Belgian catchments under a range of GCM-based scenarios.
They show how the same scenario could produce rather different changes in different
catchments, depending largely on the catchment geological conditions. Catchments
with large amounts of groundwater storage tend to have higher summer flows under
the climate change scenarios considered because additional winter rainfall tends
to lead to greater groundwater recharge (the extra rainfall offsets the shorter
recharge season). Low flows in catchments with little storage tend to be reduced
because these catchments do not feel the benefits of increased winter recharge.
Arnell and Reynard (1996) found similar results in the UK. The effect of climate
change on low flow magnitudes and frequency therefore can be considered to be
very significantly affected by catchment geology (and, indeed, storage capacity
in general). Dvorak et al. (1997) also showed how changes in low flow measures
tend to be proportionately greater than changes in annual, seasonal, or monthly
flows.
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