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Water woes in western US due to climate changes

By Staff
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Google Oneindia News

Wasington, Feb 2(UNI) Water woes in the western Europe have been the result of increased human activity and resultant climate change, suggests researchers.

''We looked at whether there is a human-caused climate change where we live, and in aspects of our climate that we really care about,'' said Benjamin Santer of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory's (LLNL) and co-author of the paper, Science Daily reported.

''No matter what we did, we couldn't shake this robust conclusion that human-caused warming is affecting water resources here in the Western United States,'' he said.

By looking at air temperatures, river flow and snowpack over the last 50 years, the team determined that the human-induced increase in greenhouse gases has seriously affected the water supply in the West. And the future brings more of the same.

''It's pretty much the same throughout all of the Western United States,'' said Tim Barnett, a co-author of the paper.

''The results are being driven by temperature change. And that temperature change is caused by us,'' he said.

The Rocky Mountains have warmed by 2 degrees Fahrenheit. The snowpack in the Sierras has dwindled by 20 per cent and the temperatures there have heated up by 1.7 degrees Fahrenheit.

All could lead to dire consequences for the water supply in the Western United States, including California. Scientists have noted that water flow in the West has decreased for the last 20 to 30 years, but had never explained why it was happening.

The team scaled down global climate models to the regional scale and compared the results to observations over the last 50 years. The results were solid, giving the team confidence that they could use the same models to predict the effects of the global scale increase in greenhouse gases on the Western United States in the future.

By 2040, most of the snowpack in the Sierras and Colorado Rockies would melt by April 1 of each year because of rising air temperatures. The earlier snow melt would lead to a shift in river flows.

The shift could lead to flooding in California's Central Valley.

Currently, state reservoirs are filled during the rainy season. As the water is drawn down, the reservoirs are replenished with snow melt from the Sierras.

If that snow melts earlier, as predicted in the climate models, the reservoirs could overflow.

''We are headed for a water crisis in the Western United States that has already started,'' Tim Barnett said, adding that ''A couple of decades ahead, we might not have that snowpack, making us more susceptible to flooding''.

''The increase in predicted river flow should be a wake-up call to officials that the water supply infrastructure needs to be updated now, as opposed to waiting until the situation is urgent,'' Santer remarked.

As for the warming, with the existing greenhouse gas in the atmosphere, the Earth will continue to warm for the next 80-100 years.

UNI XC SZ VC1045

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