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From climate model ensembles to climate change impacts and adaptation: a case study of water resource management in the southwest of England

Abstract:
The majority of climate change impacts and adaptation studies so far have been based on at most a few deterministic realizations of future climate, usually representing different emissions scenarios. Large ensembles of climate models are increasingly available either as ensembles of opportunity or perturbed physics ensembles, providing a wealth of additional data that is potentially useful for improving adaptation strategies to climate change. Because of the novelty of this ensemble information, there is little previous experience of practical applications or of the added value of this information for impacts and adaptation decision making. This paper evaluates the value of perturbed physics ensembles of climate models for understanding and planning public water supply under climate change. We deliberately select water resource models that are already used by water supply companies and regulators on the assumption that uptake of information from large ensembles of climate models will be more likely if it does not involve significant investment in new modeling tools and methods. We illustrate the methods with a case study on the Wimbleball water resource zone in the southwest of England. This zone is sufficiently simple to demonstrate the utility of the approach but with enough complexity to allow a variety of different decisions to be made. Our research shows that the additional information contained in the climate model ensemble provides a better understanding of the possible ranges of future conditions, compared to the use of singlemodel scenarios. Furthermore, with careful presentation, decision makers will find the results from large ensembles of models more accessible and be able to more easily compare the merits of different management options and the timing of different adaptation. The overhead in additional time and expertise for carrying out the impacts analysis will be justified by the increased quality of the decision-making process. We remark that even though we have focused our study on a water resource system in the United Kingdom, our conclusions about the added value of climate model ensembles in guiding adaptation decisions can be generalized to other sectors and geographical regions.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1029/2008WR007499

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Institution:
University of London
Role:
Author
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Institution:
Tyndall Centre for Climate Change and Climate Systems
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Author
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Institution:
Tyndall Centre for Climate Change and Climate Systems
Role:
Author
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Institution:
Environment Agency, Bristol, UK
Department:
Science Department
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Institution:
Environment Agency, Exeter, UK
Department:
Water Resources Planning
Role:
Author


Publisher:
American Geophysical Union
Journal:
Water Resources Research More from this journal
Volume:
45
Article number:
W08419
Publication date:
2009-08-01
DOI:
ISSN:
0043–1397


Language:
English
Keywords:
Subjects:
UUID:
uuid:fc75920a-2fcd-4786-b1a5-70c347db17a7
Local pid:
ora:4474
Deposit date:
2010-11-19
ARK identifier:

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