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Climate Change Bill Taylor The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) “The work of the…IPCC represents the consensus of the international science community on climate change science. We recognize IPCC as the world’s most reliable source of information…and endorse its method of achieving this consensus.” Joint statement by Academies of Science – May 2001 www.ipcc.ch Part 1 Evidence of climate change Is the climate changing? Earth’s temperature record deschutes.gso.uri.edu/ www.studyworksonline.com Proxy record www.studyworksonline.com Instrumental record Variations in the Earth’s surface temperature for the past 140 years Global Data from thermometers Source: IPCC Third Assessment Report, 2001 Departures in temperature (°C) from the 1961-1990 average Variations in the Earth’s surface temperature for the past 1000 years (N. Hemisphere) Data from thermometers (red) and from tree rings, corals, ice cores and historical records (blue). Source: IPCC Third Assessment Report, 2001 Temperature trends in Canada annual - from 1950–1998 Daily Minimum Units are degrees C per 49-year period. Grid squares with trends statistically significant at 5% are marked by crosses. Source: Zhang et al, 2000 Trends in daily minimum temperature seasonal - from 1950–1998 Units are degrees C per 49-year period. Grid squares with trends statistically significant at 5% are marked by crosses. Source: Zhang et al, 2000 20th Century warming in Southern Canada • Temperature increase of 0.9° C per century • Canada has become “less cold” • Canada is wetter • Shifts in snow fraction • Large regional differences • Large seasonal differences Source: Zhang et al, 2000 Part 2 Physical evidence Visible changes? Glaciers in retreat Source: IPCC, Third Assessment Report, 2001 Sea-ice extent and thickness Northern Hemisphere •10% reduction in sea-ice extent during spring and summer • 40% reduction in Arctic sea-ice thickness Source: Vinnikov et al, 1999 Source: IPCC, Third Assessment Report, 2001 Snow-cover extent and duration Changes in Northern Hemisphere in 20th Century • 10% reduction in snow cover extent since late ‘60s • 2 week reduction in duration of lake and river ice cover Source: IPCC, Third Assessment Report, 2001 Source: R. Brown, Environment Canada Part 3 Impacts on hydrology Vulnerability to climate change? Water Management & Climate Change in the Okanagan – CCAF Project • Climate change scenarios • Hydrologic modeling (water supply) • Agricultural modeling (water demand) • Adaptation Options(cost/benefit; stakeholder dialogue) Supported by a grant from the Climate Change Action Fund (#A463/433), Natural Resources Canada, Ottawa. Okanagan Agriculture • Wine industry – ~$200 million sales – Tourism • Tree fruit – $67 million sales (apples = $43 million) • % change in area grown 1996-2001 – Apples -20% – Grapes +193% Source: (1) BC Wine Institute (2) BC Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Fisheries (2001 data) Irrigation “Agricultural sustainability in these semi-arid regions is primarily determined by water supply being adequate to meet demand.” (Denise Nelisen, PARC) 18 16 14 13 Summerland 14 12 11 10 12 9 10 8 7 8 6 5 6 Thousands of acre-feet Annual total consumption in million cubic metres Annual water use 4 4 2 Residential consumption 2 Irrigation Total consumption 0 1975 3 1980 1985 Courtesy: David Sellers, consultant 1990 1995 2000 1 Total consumption trendline 0 Residential trendline 2005 Irrigation trendline Crop Water Demand • Amount of water required depends on – Crop coefficients (ET) – Length of growing season (growing degree days) • Area x usage for each polygon • Summed over all polygons Indicator: daily maximum temperature in growing season Water supply (Snow Pack) • Supply of water during growing season depends on accumulation of snow during winter Indicators: • Snowpack (SWE) • Winter and spring temperature • Snow fraction Trends in Daily Maximum Temperature 0.024 ºC per year 0.010 ºC per year 0.012 ºC per year 0.013 ºC per year Daily Maximum Temperature - Summerland Trends in snow fraction • SF = portion of precipitation that falls as snow • Based on Nov-Mar snow and precip • Differences in elevation – McCulloch – 1250m – Penticton – 344m Trends in snow pack • April 1 SWE – Declines at some stations – Elevation? 1780 m • Warmer springtime! April 1 SWE at Summerland Reservoir vs March Tmax at Summerland 450 1280 m 400 SWE (mm) 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 4 5 6 7 8 9 degrees (C) 10 11 12 13 14 Onset of snow-melt • = Date of Tavg > 0 • Based on Daily Average Temperature at McCulloch (1250m) • Advance of 11 days over 45 years (11 +/- 4 days) Part 4 Climate change projections How will climate change in future? Causes of climate change •Natural factors - Solar variability - Volcanic dust - Internal variability (ENSO, PDO) •Human factors - Greenhouse gases - Aerosols - Ozone depletion - Land use change Global temperature response to SRES scenarios 5.8° 1.4° Source: IPCC, Third Assessment Report, 2001 Unprecedented warming! Source: IPCC Third Assessment Report, 2001 o Winter Season (DJF) 2050, Lat=50 Lon=120 Climate Change Scenarios for 50 °N, 120°W for the 2050s o Precipitation Change (%) 25 20 15 10 5 Legend 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 Mean Temperature Change (oC) CGCM2 A21 CGCM2 B21 CSIROMk2 A21 o Summer Season (JJA) 2050, Lat=50 Lon=120 o Precipitation Change (%) CSIROMk2 B21 10 HadCM3 A22 0 HadCM3 B22 -10 -20 -30 -40 0 1 2 3 4 o Mean Temperature Change ( C) 5 Impacts on Water Supply • Reduction in snow pack • More rain dominated hydrograph • Change in volume and timing of peak flows Modeled SWE for Pearson Creek catchment based on Joe Rich Creek 700 600 SWE (mm) 500 Base 400 CGCM2 A2 300 HadCM3 A2 200 CSIRO A2 100 19 61 19 71 19 81 19 91 20 01 20 11 20 21 20 31 20 41 20 51 20 61 20 71 20 81 20 91 0 Snow Water Equivalent Stream Discharge Source: Wendy Merritt & Younes Alila, UBC – UBC Watershed Model results Basin crop water use in response to climate change Cubic metres (millions) 400 350 Total water use 300 A21 B21 250 200 historic 150 CGCM2CSIROM2- 100 HADCM3- 50 0 hist 2020 2050 2080 2020 Scenario date Source: Denise Neilsen, PARC, Ag. Canada, Summerland 2050 2080 Costs and Benefits of Adaptation Options in the Okanagan • Demand-side management options – – – – – Public education (10%) Irrigation scheduling (10%) Drip irrigation (30%) Leak detection (10 to 15%) Domestic water metering (20 to 30%) • Supply-side options – Lake pumping (up to 100%) – Increase storage (limited) Costs range from $1,000 to $2,000 per acre-foot The End