Abstract

Irrigation-based agriculture constitutes an essential factor for food security as well as fresh water resources and has a distinct impact on regional and global climate. Many issues related to irrigation’s climate impact are addressed in studies that apply a wide range of models. These involve substantial uncertainties related to differences in the model’s structure and its parametrizations on the one hand and the need for simplifying assumptions for the representation of irrigation on the other hand. To address these uncertainties, we used the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology’s Earth System model into which a simple irrigation scheme was implemented. In order to estimate possible uncertainties with regard to the model’s more general structure, we compared the climate impact of irrigation between three simulations that use different schemes for the land-surface–atmosphere coupling. Here, it can be shown that the choice of coupling scheme does not only affect the magnitude of possible impacts but even their direction. For example, when using a scheme that does not explicitly resolve spatial subgrid scale heterogeneity at the surface, irrigation reduces the atmospheric water content, even in heavily irrigated regions. Contrarily, in simulations that use a coupling scheme that resolves heterogeneity at the surface or even within the lowest layers of the atmosphere, irrigation increases the average atmospheric specific humidity. A second experiment targeted possible uncertainties related to the representation of irrigation characteristics. Here, in four simulations the irrigation effectiveness (controlled by the target soil moisture and the non-vegetated fraction of the grid box that receives irrigation) and the timing of delivery were varied. The second experiment shows that uncertainties related to the modelled irrigation characteristics, especially the irrigation effectiveness, are also substantial. In general the impact of irrigation on the state of the land surface is more than three times larger when assuming a low irrigation effectiveness than when a high effectiveness is assumed. For certain variables, such as the vertically integrated water vapour, the impact is almost an order of magnitude larger. The timing of irrigation also has non-negligible effects on the simulated climate impacts and it can strongly alter their seasonality.

Highlights

  • Irrigation is vital for satisfying global food demand, but it has a distinct impact on climate

  • The land-surface–atmosphere coupling strongly affects the simulated gross irrigation which ranges between 393 km3 a−1 for PI1 and1202 km3 a−1 for SI1

  • The gross irrigation constitutes only a rough approximation of the amount of water that has a direct impact on the simulated climate, as a significant fraction of the water merely results in increased runoff and drainage

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Summary

Introduction

Irrigation is vital for satisfying global food demand, but it has a distinct impact on climate. A summary of recent studies can be found in Hagemann et al (2014). Boucher et al (2004) describe two main mechanisms by which irrigation affects climate, i.e. an evaporative cooling at the surface and an increased absorption of solar radiation higher in the atmosphere, combined with an additional green house effect and condensational heating. The expected impacts of irrigation on the state of the atmosphere are an overall increase in water vapour and a pronounced decrease in temperature close to the surface. The effects due to the additional water vapour in the atmosphere compensate the cooling effects, resulting in a less pronounced decrease or even an increase in temperature higher up in the atmosphere

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