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Assessing water resources adaptive capacity to climate change impacts in the Pacific Northwest Region of North America

机译:评估北美西北太平洋地区水资源对气候变化影响的适应能力

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pstrongAbstract./strong Climate change impacts in Pacific Northwest Region of North America (PNW) are projected to include increasing temperatures and changes in the seasonality of precipitation (increasing precipitation in winter, decreasing precipitation in summer). Changes in precipitation are also spatially varying, with the northwestern parts of the region generally experiencing greater increases in cool season precipitation than the southeastern parts. These changes in climate are projected to cause loss of snowpack and associated streamflow timing shifts which will increase cool season (Octobera??March) flows and decrease warm season (Aprila??September) flows and water availability. Hydrologic extremes such as the 100 yr flood and extreme low flows are also expected to change, although these impacts are not spatially homogeneous and vary with mid-winter temperatures and other factors. These changes have important implications for natural ecosystems affected by water, and for human systems. brbr The PNW is endowed with extensive water resources infrastructure and well-established and well-funded management agencies responsible for ensuring that water resources objectives (such as water supply, water quality, flood control, hydropower production, environmental services, etc.) are met. Likewise, access to observed hydrological, meteorological, and climatic data and forecasts is in general exceptionally good in the United States and Canada, and is often supported by federally funded programs that ensure that these resources are freely available to water resources practitioners, policy makers, and the general public. brbr Access to these extensive resources support the argument that at a technical level the PNW has high capacity to deal with the potential impacts of natural climate variability on water resources. To the extent that climate change will manifest itself as moderate changes in variability or extremes, we argue that existing water resources infrastructure and institutional arrangements provide a reasonably solid foundation for coping with climate change impacts, and that the mandates of existing water resources policy and water resources management institutions are at least consistent with the fundamental objectives of climate change adaptation. A deeper inquiry into the underlying nature of PNW water resources systems, however, reveals significant and persistent obstacles to climate change adaptation, which will need to be overcome if effective use of the region's extensive water resources management capacity can be brought to bear on this problem. Primary obstacles include assumptions of stationarity as the fundamental basis of water resources system design, entrenched use of historical records as the sole basis for planning, problems related to the relatively short time scale of planning, lack of familiarity with climate science and models, downscaling procedures, and hydrologic models, limited access to climate change scenarios and hydrologic products for specific water systems, and rigid water allocation and water resources operating rules that effectively block adaptive response. Institutional barriers include systematic loss of technical capacity in many water resources agencies following the dam building era, jurisdictional fragmentation affecting response to drought, disconnections between water policy and practice, and entrenched bureaucratic resistance to change in many water management agencies. These factors, combined with a federal agenda to block climate change policy in the US during the Bush administration have (with some exceptions) contributed to widespread institutional "gridlock" in the PNW over the last decade or so despite a growing awareness of climate change as a significant threat to water management. In the last several years, however, significant progress has been made in surmounting some of these obstacles, and the regi
机译:> >摘要。预计北美西北太平洋地区(PNW)的气候变化影响包括温度升高和降水季节变化(冬季降水增加,夏季降水减少)。降水量的变化在空间上也是变化的,该地区的西北部通常比东南部地区的凉季降水增加更多。这些气候变化预计会导致积雪损失以及相关的水流时移,这将增加凉季(Octobera ?? 3月)的流量,并减少暖季(Aprila ?? 9月)的流量和可用水量。预计100年洪水和极端低水位等极端水文状况也会发生变化,尽管这些影响在空间上不是均匀的,并且会随着冬季中期温度和其他因素而变化。这些变化对受水影响的自然生态系统以及人类系统具有重要意义。 PNW拥有广泛的水资源基础设施以及完善且资金雄厚的管理机构,负责确保水资源目标(例如供水,水质,防洪,水电生产,环境服务,等)。同样,在美国和加拿大,获得观测到的水文,气象和气候数据及预报的情况通常非常好,并且通常受到联邦资助计划的支持,这些计划可确保水资源从业者,政策制定者,和公众。 获得这些大量资源的论点支持着这样的论点,即PNW在技术水平上具有应对自然气候多变性对水资源的潜在影响的高能力。在一定程度上,气候变化将表现为变异性或极端性的适度变化,我们认为,现有的水资源基础设施和体制安排为应对气候变化的影响提供了合理坚实的基础,并且现有水资源政策和水资源的授权资源管理机构至少符合适应气候变化的基本目标。然而,对PNW水资源系统基本性质的更深入研究揭示了气候变化适应的重大和持久障碍,如果能够有效利用该地区广泛的水资源管理能力来解决这一问题,就必须克服这些障碍。 。主要障碍包括:假设平稳性是水资源系统设计的基本基础;根深蒂固地使用历史记录作为规划的唯一基础;与规划时间相对较短有关的问题;对气候科学和模型缺乏了解;缩减规模的程序,水文模型,针对特定水系统的气候变化情景和水文产品的访问权限有限,以及僵化的水分配和水资源运行规则,这些规则有效地阻止了自适应响应。制度上的障碍包括在大坝建设之后许多水资源机构的系统能力的系统性丧失,影响干旱响应的管辖权分散,水政策与实践之间的脱节以及许多水管理机构对改革的顽强官僚抵制。这些因素,再加上在布什政府期间阻止美国实施气候变化政策的联邦议程,(尽管有一些例外)在过去十年左右的时间里,在西北太平洋地区造成了广泛的体制“僵局”,尽管人们对气候变化的认识日益增强。对水管理的重大威胁。然而,在过去的几年中,在克服这些障碍中的一些方面已经取得了重大进展。

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