Abstract

Abstract. Climate changes are expected to result in a warmer global climate, with increased inter-annual variability. In this study, the possible impacts of these climate changes on irrigation and low stream flow are investigated using a distributed hydrological model of a sandy catchment in western Denmark. The IPCC climate scenario A1B was chosen as the basis for the study, and meteorological forcings (precipitation, reference evapotranspiration and temperature) derived from the ECHAM5-RACMO regional climate model for the period 2071–2100 was applied to the model. Two bias correction methods, delta change and Distribution-Based Scaling, were used to evaluate the importance of the bias correction method. Using the annual irrigation amounts, the 5-percentile stream flow, the median minimum stream flow and the mean stream flow as indicators, the irrigation and the stream flow predicted using the two methods were compared. The study found that irrigation is significantly underestimated when using the delta change method, due to the inability of this method to account for changes in inter-annual variability of precipitation and reference ET and the resulting effects on irrigation demands. However, this underestimation of irrigation did not result in a significantly higher summer stream flow, because the summer stream flow in the studied catchment is controlled by the winter and spring recharge, rather than the summer precipitation. Additionally, future increases in CO2 are found to have a significant effect on both irrigation and low flow, due to reduced transpiration from plants.

Highlights

  • Future climate changes are expected to result in a generally warmer north European climate (IPCC, 2007b)

  • We use one model pairing from ENSEMBLES, based on the ECHAM5 GCM developed by the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology (MPI), and the RACMO2 RCM developed by the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (KNMI) as we found ECHAM5-RACMO2 to be a median model of climate change for the Danish region

  • The impact of climate change on irrigation and low stream flow are evaluated primarily based on model outputs of mean and maximum yearly irrigation, as well as mean stream flow, minimum flow and median minimum flow, where the latter is defined as the median of annual minimum daily discharge

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Summary

Introduction

Future climate changes are expected to result in a generally warmer north European climate (IPCC, 2007b). There are other factors that may affect the irrigation demands, thereby dampening the effects of the climate changes. These include land use changes to fit the future climate and the expected increase in atmospheric CO2, which may decrease the transpiration of crops. All these factors, combined with the fact that the scale and nature of the climate changes is uncertain, means that assessing future irrigation demands is a complex task

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