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Transcript
Effects of Climate Change on the
Columbia River Basin’s Water
Resources
JISAO Center for Science in the Earth System
Climate Impacts Group
and Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
University of Washington
Nov, 2005
Alan F. Hamlet
Philip W. Mote
Nathan Mantua
Dennis P. Lettenmaier
Natural AND human influences explain the observations of
global warming best.
Natural Climate Influence
Human Climate Influence
All Climate Influences
Temperature trends (°F per century) since 1920
cooler warmer
3.6°F
2.7°F
1.8°F
0.9°F
Annual Precipitation
(Western WA, OR, BC)
Hydroclimatology of the Pacific Northwest
Columbia River Basin
Useable Storage ~35 MAF
~50% of storage is in Canada
~Storage is 30% of annual flow
Snowpack functions as a
natural reservoir
Elevation (m)
Annual PNW Precipitation (mm)
The Dalles
Effects of the PDO and ENSO on Columbia River
Summer Streamflows
PDO
450000
Cool
Cool
Warm
Apr-Sept Flow (cfs)
400000
Warm
350000
300000
250000
200000
high
high
low
low
Ocean Productivity
2000
1990
1980
1970
1960
1950
1940
1930
1920
1910
1900
150000
Warming Affects Streamflow Timing
900000
Black: Obs
Red: 2.3° C warming
700000
600000
500000
400000
300000
200000
100000
Water Year
1974
1974
1974
1974
1974
1974
1973
1973
1973
1973
1973
0
1973
•Streamflow
timing is altered
• Annual volume
may be
somewhat lower
due to increased
ET
800000
Flow (cfs)
Temperature
warms,
precipitation
unaltered:
Precipitation Affects Streamflow Volume
900000
Black -- Obs
Blue -- 9% increase in precip.
700000
600000
500000
400000
300000
200000
100000
Water Year
1974
1974
1974
1974
1974
1974
1973
1973
1973
1973
1973
0
1973
•Streamflow
timing stays
about the same
•Annual volume
is altered
800000
Flow (cfs)
Precipitation
increases,
temperature
unaltered:
Observed Hydrologic Changes
Trends in April 1 SWE 1950-1997
Mote P.W.,Hamlet A.F., Clark M.P., Lettenmaier D.P., 2005, Declining
mountain snowpack in western North America, BAMS (in press)
As the West warms,
spring flows rise
and summer flows
drop
Stewart IT, Cayan DR,
Dettinger MD, 2005:
Changes toward earlier
streamflow timing across
western North America, J.
Climate, 18 (8): 1136-1155
Global Climate Change Scenarios
and Hydrologic Impacts for the PNW
Four Delta Method Climate Change Scenarios for the PNW
Delta T, 2020s
Delta T, 2040s
5
5
~ + 1.7 C
~ + 2.25 C
4
hadCM2
3
hadCM3
2
PCM3
ECHAM4
1
Degrees C
Degrees C
4
mean
0
hadCM2
3
hadCM3
2
PCM3
ECHAM4
1
mean
0
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
J
-1
F
M
A
Precipitation Fraction, 2020s
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
Precipitation Fraction, 2040s
1.75
1.75
1.5
1.5
hadCM2
hadCM3
1.25
PCM3
1
ECHAM4
Fraction
Fraction
M
-1
hadCM2
hadCM3
1.25
PCM3
1
ECHAM4
mean
0.75
mean
0.75
0.5
0.5
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
Somewhat wetter winters and perhaps somewhat dryer summers
Changes in Mean
Temperature and
Precipitation or Bias
Corrected Output
from GCMs
VIC
Hydrology Model
ColSim
Reservoir
Model
The warmest locations are most
sensitive to warming
+2.3C,
+4.5%
winter
precip
Changes in Simulated April 1
Snowpack for the Canadian
and U.S. portions of the
Columbia River basin
(% change relative to current climate)
Current Climate
“2020s” (+1.7 C)
-3.6%
-21.4%
April 1 SWE (mm)
“2040s” (+ 2.25 C)
-11.5%
-34.8%
Naturalized Flow for Historic and Global Warming Scenarios
Compared to Effects of Regulation at 1990 Level Development
Historic Naturalized Flow
Estimated Range of
Naturalized Flow
With 2040’s Warming
Regulated Flow
Decadal Climate Variability and Climate
Change
Will Global Warming be “Warm and
Wet” or “Warm and Dry”?
Answer:
Probably BOTH!
450000
350000
300000
250000
200000
2000
1990
1980
1970
1960
1950
1940
1930
1920
1910
150000
1900
Apr-Sept Flow (cfs)
400000
Water Resources Implications for the Columbia
River Basin
Impacts on Columbia Basin
hydropower supplies
• Winter and
Spring:
increased
generation
• Summer:
decreased
generation
• Annual: total
production will
depend primarily
on annual
precipitation
(+2C, +6%)
(+2.3C, +5%)
(+2.9C, -4%)
NWPCC (2005)
Warming climate impacts on
electricity demand
• Reductions in winter heating demand
• Small increases in summer air conditioning demand in
the warmest parts of the region
NWPCC 2005
Adaptation to climate change will require complex tradeoffs
between ecosystem protection and hydropower operations
Percent of Control Run Climate
2070-2098
140
PCM Control Climate and
Current Operations
120
PCM Projected Climate
and Current Operations
100
PCM Projected Climate
with Adaptive
Management
80
60
Firm
Hydropower
Annual Flow
Deficit at
McNary
Source: Payne, J.T., A.W. Wood, A.F. Hamlet, R.N. Palmer, and D.P. Lettenmaier, 2004, Mitigating the effects of
climate change on the water resources of the Columbia River basin, Climatic Change, Vol. 62, Issue 1-3, 233-256
Flood Control vs. Refill
Maintaining an appropriate balance between flood protection
and the reliability of reservoir refill is crucial to many water
resources objectives in the Columbia Basin.
As streamflow timing shifts move peak flows earlier in the
year, flood evacuation schedules may need to be revised both
to protect against early season flooding and to begin refill
earlier to capture the (smaller) spring freshet.
Model experiments (see Payne et al. 2004) have shown that
moving flood evacuation two weeks to one month earlier in
the year helps mitigate reductions in refill reliability associated
with streamflow timing shifts.
Payne, J.T., A.W. Wood, A.F. Hamlet, R.N. Palmer, and D.P. Lettenmaier, 2004, Mitigating the effects of climate
change on the water resources of the Columbia River basin, Climatic Change, Vol. 62, Issue 1-3, 233-256
Temperature thresholds for
coldwater fish in freshwater
• Warming temperatures will increasingly stress coldwater
fish in the warmest parts of our region
– A monthly average temperature of 68ºF (20ºC) has been used as an upper
limit for resident cold water fish habitat, and is known to stress Pacific
salmon during periods of freshwater migration, spawning, and rearing
+1.7 °C
+2.3 °C
Implications for Transboundary
Agreements
•Snowpack in the BC portion of the Columbia basin is much less
sensitive to warming in comparison with portions of the basin in the
U.S. and streamflow timing shifts will also be smaller in Canada.
•As warming progresses, Canada will have an increasing fraction of
the snowpack contributing to summer streamflow volumes in the
Columbia basin.
•These differing impacts in the two countries have the potential to
“unbalance” the current coordination agreements, and will present
serious challenges to meeting instream flows on the U.S. side.
•Changes in flood control, hydropower production, and instream flow
augmentation will all be needed.
•Long-range planning is needed to address these issues.
Conclusions
•Climate change will result in significant hydrologic changes in the
Columbia River and its tributaries.
•These changes will not be equally distributed throughout the
region or between different water management objectives.
•With hydrologic changes, there will come a need to “rebalance”
the system to compensate for these different impacts in each
sector.
•This “rebalancing” will take time and will involve complex (and
contentious) tradeoffs between different management objectives.
•We have the tools that we need to begin planning for a warmer
future.
•We should begin to include climate information in planning now to
reduce the severity of future impacts as much as possible.
Selected References and URL’s
Climate Impacts Group Website
http://www.cses.washington.edu/cig/
White Papers, Agenda, Presentations for CIG 2001 Climate Change Workshop
http://jisao.washington.edu/PNWimpacts/Workshops/Skamania2001/WP01_agenda.htm
Climate Change Streamflow Scenarios for Water Planning Studies
http://www.ce.washington.edu/~hamleaf/climate_change_streamflows/CR_cc.htm
Northwest Power and Conservation Council Columbia Basin Hydropower Study
http://www.nwppc.org/energy/powerplan/plan/Default.htm
Refs on Climate Variability and Climate Change
http://www.ce.washington.edu/~hamleaf/hamlet/publications.html