Abstract

Abstract. There is growing concern in Europe about the possible rise in the severity and frequency of extreme drought events as a manifestation of climate change. In order to plan suitable adaptation strategies it is important for decision makers to know how drought conditions will develop at regional scales. This paper therefore addresses the issue of future developments in streamflow drought characteristics across Europe. Through offline coupling of a hydrological model with an ensemble of bias-corrected climate simulations (IPCC SRES A1B) and a water use scenario (Economy First), long-term (1961–2100) ensemble streamflow simulations are generated that account for changes in climate, and the uncertainty therein, and in water consumption. Using extreme value analysis we derive minimum flow and deficit indices and evaluate how the magnitude and severity of low-flow conditions may evolve throughout the 21st century. This analysis shows that streamflow droughts will become more severe and persistent in many parts of Europe due to climate change, except for northern and northeastern parts of Europe. In particular, southern regions will face strong reductions in low flows. Future water use will aggravate the situation by 10–30% in southern Europe, whereas in some sub-regions in western, central and eastern Europe a climate-driven signal of reduced droughts may be reversed due to intensive water use. The multi-model ensemble projections of more frequent and severe streamflow droughts in the south and decreasing drought hazard in the north are highly significant, while the projected changes are more dissonant in a transition zone in between.

Highlights

  • Drought is a natural feature of the water cycle that can occur in all climatic zones

  • We argue that river basins with an upstream area exceeding 1000 km2 are representative enough to explore the impact of climate changes on future hydrological droughts at continental scale

  • Discharge values have been collected within the ECA&D project and by the Global Runoff Data Centre (GRDC), CEDEX-IEH Banque HYDRO and ARPA Emilia Romagna

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Summary

Introduction

Drought is a natural feature of the water cycle that can occur in all climatic zones It originates from a temporary aberration of the normal precipitation regime over a large area, but other climatic factors, such as high temperatures and winds or low relative humidity, can significantly aggravate the severity of the event. Anthropogenic drivers, such as intensive water use and poor water management, can further exacerbate low-flow conditions in watersheds, with a consequent increase in vulnerability to drought (e.g., Vörösmarty et al, 2000; Tallaksen and van Lanen 2004; Döll et al, 2009; Wada et al, 2013a). With a warmer climate, droughts could become more frequent, severe, and longer-lasting in Europe

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