Abstract

Abstract. The spatial and temporal variability of air temperature, precipitation, actual evapotranspiration (AET) and their related water balance components, as well as their responses to anthropogenic climate change, provide fundamental information for an effective management of water resources and for a proactive involvement of users and stakeholders, in order to develop and apply adaptation and mitigation strategies at the local level. In this study, using an interdisciplinary research approach tailored to water management needs, we evaluate the past, present and future quantity of water potentially available for drinking supply in the water catchments feeding the about 2.3 million inhabitants of the Turin metropolitan area (the former Province of Turin, north-western Italy), considering climatologies at the quarterly and yearly timescales. Observed daily maximum surface air temperature and precipitation data from 1959 to 2017 were analysed to assess historical trends, their significance and the possible cross-correlations between the water balance components. Regional climate model (RCM) simulations from a small ensemble were analysed to provide mid-century projections of the difference between precipitation and AET for the area of interest in the future CMIP5 scenarios RCP4.5 (stabilization) and RCP8.5 (business as usual). Temporal and spatial variations in recharge were approximated with variations of drainage. The impact of irrigation, and of snowpack variability, on the latter was also assessed. The other terms of water balance were disregarded because they are affected by higher uncertainty. The analysis over the historical period indicated that the driest area of the study region displayed significant negative annual (and spring) trends of both precipitation and drainage. Results from field experiments were used to model irrigation, and we found that relatively wetter watersheds in the northern and in the southern parts behave differently, with a significant increase of AET due to irrigation. The analysis of future projections suggested almost stationary conditions for annual data. Regarding quarterly data, a slight decrease in summer drainage was found in three out of five models in both emission scenarios. The RCM ensemble exhibits a large spread in the representation of the future drainage trends. The large interannual variability of precipitation was also quantified and identified as a relevant risk factor for water management, expected to play a major role also in future decades.

Highlights

  • Water is a crucial resource, intrinsically linked to society and culture development, food and energy security, wellbeing, environmental sustainability and poverty reduction

  • The soil hydraulic properties have been estimated via pedotransfer functions (PTF) following Schaap et al (2001) from the sand, clay and silt percentages taken from the soil map of the Piemonte Region

  • Using one single Regional climate model (RCM) allowed us to obtain an ensemble of reasonably homogeneous simulations at the regional level but representing at the same time model uncertainties in future projections captured by the different large-scale global climate models (GCMs)

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Summary

Introduction

Water is a crucial resource, intrinsically linked to society and culture development, food and energy security, wellbeing, environmental sustainability and poverty reduction. In this paper we develop a stakeholder-driven interdisciplinary research study, where scientists in atmospheric/climate research and hydrologists work together with agricultural and soil scientists and experts from a water utility to quantify the role of groundwater, focusing on an area providing water to about 2.3 million people. This area is characterized by a very large spatial precipitation and air temperature variability, owing to the proximity of high mountains and of the sea. This paper represents a scientific contribution to the management and the governance of water resources and water supply that could be applied worldwide, through, for example, the implementation of scientifically driven guidelines and strategic agendas on water supply and water policies

Study area
Water balance terms
Soil water model
Actual evapotranspiration computation
Temperature and precipitation
Input data of the soil water model
Future projections of precipitation and temperature
RCA4 regional climate model
Emission scenarios
RCM data post-processing
Trends in observed data
Hydrological year analysis
Analysis at the quarterly scale
Mid-century projections of drainage
Quarterly analysis
Conclusions
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