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The Global Water System Project Marcel Endejan GWSP – International Project Office Bonn, Germany Poznan, 24 Nov 2004 Overview Global Water System Project Institutional Background Framing Questions & Themes Implementation Linkages to BALTEX ESSP Dynamics of the GWS GWSP – Central Tenet Human-induced changes to the global water system are now globally significant and are being modified without adequate understanding of how the system works The Global Water System Working definition The global suite of water-related human, physical, biological, and biogeochemical components and their interactions. BIOLOGICAL & BIOGEOCHEMICAL COMPONENTS e.g. species richness, habitat quality, water quality PHYSICAL COMPONENTS e.g. moisture transport, precipitation, river discharge, water storage WATER CYCLING HUMAN COMPONENTS e.g. water related institutions, water engineering works, water use sectors ESSP Projects BALTEX GWSP Research Niches Focus on global environmental change Science driven but policy-relevant Global perspective, taking local- and watershed processes into account Broad temporal perspective (Past-present-future time domains) Interdisciplinary & integrative Focus on fresh water Goals & Vision Gain a new understanding about the global water system Refine society‘s view of water Create a vision of future possible states of the global water system GWSP Framing Document The Framing Committee Joseph Alcamo (Chair), Hartmut Grassl, Pavel Kabat, Felino Lansigan, Richard Lawford, Dennis Lettenmaier, Christian Leveque, Michel Meybeck, Robert Naiman, Claudia Pahl-Wostl, Charles Vörösmarty Scoping Team Carlo Jaeger, Dennis Lettenmaier, Christian Leveque, Harry Lins, Michel Meybeck, Madiodio Niasse, and Charles Vörösmarty www.gwsp.org Overarching Question How are human actions changing the global water system and what are the environmental and socio-economic feedbacks arising from the anthropogenic changes in the global water system? Framing Questions (Themes) What are the magnitudes and key mechanisms of anthropogenic and environmental changes in the GWS? What are the main linkages and feedbacks within the Earth system, arising from changes in the GWS? How resilient and adaptable is the GWS to change, and what are sustainable management strategies? Mechanisms by which humans are affecting the GWS reservoirs, withdrawal, transfers resulting in stop-flow events, changes in nutrient and sediment fluxes etc. Glen Canyon Dam, USGS 1984 Theme 1: Magnitudes and Mechanisms of Change Related activities 1.1: Water Governance & the GWS 1.2: Land Cover Changes … 1.3: Climate Change … 1.4: Water Diversions … 1.5: Nutrient and Sediment Transport … Framing Questions (Themes) What are the magnitudes and key mechanisms of anthropogenic and environmental changes in the GWS? What are the main linkages and feedbacks within the Earth system, arising from changes in the GWS? How resilient and adaptable is the GWS to change, and what are sustainable management strategies? Theme 2 Linkages and Feedbacks Related activities 2.1: Linkages at Different Spatial Scales in the Global Water System 2.2: Legacy of Human and Natural Interactions in the Global Water System Framing Questions (Themes) What are the magnitudes and key mechanisms of anthropogenic and environmental changes in the GWS? What are the main linkages and feedbacks within the Earth system, arising from changes in the GWS? How resilient and adaptable is the GWS to change, and what are sustainable management strategies? Theme 3 Resilience and Adaptation Related activities 3.1: Water Requirements for Nature and Humans 3.2: The Nature of Adaptive Capacity of the GWS 3.3: Approaches to Enhance Adaptive Capacity 3.4: The Provision of Ecosystem Goods & Services by the GWS Cross-cutting Research Activities Synthesis, Dialogue, Capacity Building, Education Goal: reach a large audience Synthesise information Dialogue with stakeholders / policy makers Engage young scientist in international teams Education programme Co-operation with other research efforts Implementation Scientific Steering Committee Members of Executive Committee Prof. Dr. Joseph Alcamo (Chair) Prof. Dr. Dennis Lettenmaier Prof. Dr. Robert Naiman Prof. Dr. Claudia Pahl-Wostl Prof. Dr. Charles Vörösmarty (Chair) Full Scientific Steering Committee 15 scientists representing different regions/research fields First full SSC meeting in February 2005 Implementation Phases Programme Finalise research plan Launch short, medium, long term initiatives Programme implementation/product delivery (3) First short and medium term results Data definition and initiation (2 years) synthesis and application of results (5) Synthesis, application and distribution of results GWSP & GEWEX/BALTEX Coupled modelling of climate, land and hydrological processes Inventories of surface water storage Data and prediction of climate variability Identifying worldwide impacts of water management Regional climate modelling Global climate change and water availability Urbanisation and water resources Conclusion Global Water System Project Consolidate various efforts into a unified, dynamic research programme Broaden knowledge about the GWS changes; linkages & feedbacks; resilience and adaptive capacity Establish monitoring indicators New numerical models, GWSP database Synergy effects in GWSP-BALTEX co-operation Get In Contact Global Water System Project International Project Office Walter-Flex-Str. 3 53113 Bonn, Germany Phone: +49.228.73.6188 Dr. Eric Craswell [email protected] Dr. Marcel Endejan [email protected] Ms. Lara Wever [email protected]