Abstract
ABSTRACT The upper Bandama basin at Badikaha in the North of Côte d'Ivoire, subject to climate change, has recorded a rapid population growth that significantly affects water availability. This study applies the water evaluation and planning (WEAP) system model to explore how the water resources available currently can meet people's needs in the future, mainly for irrigation, mining activities, rural and urban water supply and cattle breeding. The outputs from two regional climate models RACMO 22T and CCLM 4-8-17 under representative concentration pathway (RCP) 4.5 and RCP 8.5 scenarios were used for the climate change impact assessment. Results predict an increase in mean annual temperature by 1.5°C while precipitation could decrease by 21% by 2090. The climate model outputs coupled with the WEAP model show that unmet water demand estimated to 50 million m3 in 2020 could reach 115 million m3 in 2050. Nevertheless, climate change mitigation scenarios by the WEAP model, including the implementation of dams, boreholes and the hydraulics infrastructure improvement reveal that water scarcity could be reduced significantly in the catchment.
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