Climate variability affects water-energy-food infrastructure performance in East Africa

Siderius, C., Kolusu, S. R., Todd, M. C., Bhave, A. G., J. Dougill, A., C.J. Reason, C., Mkwambisi, D. D., Kashaigili, J. J., Pardoe, J., Harou, J. J., +6 more...Vincent, K., C.G. Hart, N., James, R., Washington, R., T. Geressu, R. & Conway, D.ORCID logo (2021). Climate variability affects water-energy-food infrastructure performance in East Africa. One Earth, 4(3), 397 - 410. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.oneear.2021.02.009
Copy

The need to assess major infrastructure performance under a changing climate is widely recognized yet rarely practiced, particularly in rapidly growing African economies. Here, we consider high-stakes investments across the water, energy, and food sectors for two major river basins in a climate transition zone in Africa. We integrate detailed interpretation of observed and modeled climate-system behavior with hydrological modeling and decision-relevant performance metrics. For the Rufiji River in Tanzania, projected risks for the mid-21 st century are similar to those of the present day, but for the Lake Malawi-Shire River, future risk exceeds that experienced during the 20 th century. In both basins a repeat of an early-20 th century multi-year drought would challenge the viability of proposed infrastructure. A long view, which emphasizes past and future changes in variability, set within a broader context of climate-information interpretation and decision making, is crucial for screening the risk to infrastructure.

picture_as_pdf

subject
Published Version
Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0

Download

Export as

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core JSON Multiline CSV
Export