Future long-term changes in global water resources driven by socio-economic and climatic changes
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Abstract
Abstract A global water model is used to analyse the impacts of climate change and socio-economic driving forces (derived from the A2 and B2 scenarios of IPCC) on future global water stress. This work extends previous global water research by analysing not only the impact of climate change and population, but also the effects of income, electricity production, water-use efficiency and other driving forces, on water stress. Depending on the scenario and climate model, water stress increases (between current conditions and the 2050s) over 62.0–75.8% of total river basin area and decreases over 19.7–29.0% of this area. The remaining areas have small changes. The principal cause of decreasing water stress (where…
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3Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Climate change
- Environmental science
- Water resources
- Population
- Population growth
- Current (fluid)
- Water resource management
- Ecology
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