Climate change impacts on hydrology, upstream water dependencies and crop production in the Asian Mega-Deltas

This research brief explores the interplay between water and food systems in the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna and Mekong River basins, highlighting regional dynamics and climate change impacts. To do so, a hydrology-vegetation model is used. Based on the climate change scenarios chosen in this study, i...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Biemans, Hester, de Miguel Garcia, Angel, Gülpen, Marijn, Islam, Feroz, van Scheltinga, Catharien Terwisscha, Nelson, Katherine, Mondal, Manoranjan, Urfels, Anton
Formato: Brief
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Rice Research Institute 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163727
_version_ 1855528471626776576
author Biemans, Hester
de Miguel Garcia, Angel
Gülpen, Marijn
Islam, Feroz
van Scheltinga, Catharien Terwisscha
Nelson, Katherine
Mondal, Manoranjan
Urfels, Anton
author_browse Biemans, Hester
Gülpen, Marijn
Islam, Feroz
Mondal, Manoranjan
Nelson, Katherine
Urfels, Anton
de Miguel Garcia, Angel
van Scheltinga, Catharien Terwisscha
author_facet Biemans, Hester
de Miguel Garcia, Angel
Gülpen, Marijn
Islam, Feroz
van Scheltinga, Catharien Terwisscha
Nelson, Katherine
Mondal, Manoranjan
Urfels, Anton
author_sort Biemans, Hester
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This research brief explores the interplay between water and food systems in the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna and Mekong River basins, highlighting regional dynamics and climate change impacts. To do so, a hydrology-vegetation model is used. Based on the climate change scenarios chosen in this study, in the Ganges-Brahmaputra- Meghna basin, future water inflows are projected to rise, while in the Mekong, large dam expansions are expected to decrease wet-season flooding and increase dry-season flows. Both basins have sufficient water availability to meet full irrigation demands, excluding other sectoral and ecological needs now and in the future. However, during the dry season, the simulated agricultural water withdrawal in the deltas suppose an important part of the water inflows, making clear that deltas’ inflows during the dry season in both basins are highly sensitive to upstream irrigation abstractions, which are already substantial and projected to remain so by 2050. Upstream irrigation intensification puts at the risk the downstream deltas by increasing water scarcity and complicating water allocation for other sectors, including ecosystems. Climate change impacts on food production varies significantly accordingly to the model set-up: in the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna, where land use change is considered but with no variation of CO2 concentration, yields are expected to decline due to heat stress on non-rice cereals; whereas in the Mekong, where land use change is considered constant but with variation of CO2 concentration, the effect of CO₂ fertilization limited heat stress for rice, enhancing productivity. Key adaptation challenges include improving groundwater management and promoting sustainable upstream cropping intensification in the Ganges-Brahmaputra- Meghna without deteriorating downstream water stress. In the Mekong, adaptations must address altered flooding patterns, including reduced riverine flooding and increased erratic flash floods, which could impact the Cambodian floodplains and Tonle Sap. Equitably distributing increased streamflow, to mitigate salinity intrusion in the delta while supporting upstream agricultural intensification, is also critical. This study underscores the need for integrated basin-scale water management to navigate these challenges sustainably.
format Brief
id CGSpace163727
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher International Rice Research Institute
publisherStr International Rice Research Institute
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1637272025-01-24T08:54:26Z Climate change impacts on hydrology, upstream water dependencies and crop production in the Asian Mega-Deltas Biemans, Hester de Miguel Garcia, Angel Gülpen, Marijn Islam, Feroz van Scheltinga, Catharien Terwisscha Nelson, Katherine Mondal, Manoranjan Urfels, Anton food systems climate change rivers water management This research brief explores the interplay between water and food systems in the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna and Mekong River basins, highlighting regional dynamics and climate change impacts. To do so, a hydrology-vegetation model is used. Based on the climate change scenarios chosen in this study, in the Ganges-Brahmaputra- Meghna basin, future water inflows are projected to rise, while in the Mekong, large dam expansions are expected to decrease wet-season flooding and increase dry-season flows. Both basins have sufficient water availability to meet full irrigation demands, excluding other sectoral and ecological needs now and in the future. However, during the dry season, the simulated agricultural water withdrawal in the deltas suppose an important part of the water inflows, making clear that deltas’ inflows during the dry season in both basins are highly sensitive to upstream irrigation abstractions, which are already substantial and projected to remain so by 2050. Upstream irrigation intensification puts at the risk the downstream deltas by increasing water scarcity and complicating water allocation for other sectors, including ecosystems. Climate change impacts on food production varies significantly accordingly to the model set-up: in the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna, where land use change is considered but with no variation of CO2 concentration, yields are expected to decline due to heat stress on non-rice cereals; whereas in the Mekong, where land use change is considered constant but with variation of CO2 concentration, the effect of CO₂ fertilization limited heat stress for rice, enhancing productivity. Key adaptation challenges include improving groundwater management and promoting sustainable upstream cropping intensification in the Ganges-Brahmaputra- Meghna without deteriorating downstream water stress. In the Mekong, adaptations must address altered flooding patterns, including reduced riverine flooding and increased erratic flash floods, which could impact the Cambodian floodplains and Tonle Sap. Equitably distributing increased streamflow, to mitigate salinity intrusion in the delta while supporting upstream agricultural intensification, is also critical. This study underscores the need for integrated basin-scale water management to navigate these challenges sustainably. 2024-12-17 2024-12-18T16:10:45Z 2024-12-18T16:10:45Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163727 en Open Access application/pdf International Rice Research Institute Biemans, H., de Miguel Garcia, A., Gülpen, M., Islam, F., van Scheltinga, C.T., Nelson, K., Mondal, M., Urfels, A. 2024. Climate change impacts on hydrology, upstream water dependencies and crop production in the Asian Mega-Deltas. Research brief. Los Banos, Laguna: International Rice Research Institute.
spellingShingle food systems
climate change
rivers
water management
Biemans, Hester
de Miguel Garcia, Angel
Gülpen, Marijn
Islam, Feroz
van Scheltinga, Catharien Terwisscha
Nelson, Katherine
Mondal, Manoranjan
Urfels, Anton
Climate change impacts on hydrology, upstream water dependencies and crop production in the Asian Mega-Deltas
title Climate change impacts on hydrology, upstream water dependencies and crop production in the Asian Mega-Deltas
title_full Climate change impacts on hydrology, upstream water dependencies and crop production in the Asian Mega-Deltas
title_fullStr Climate change impacts on hydrology, upstream water dependencies and crop production in the Asian Mega-Deltas
title_full_unstemmed Climate change impacts on hydrology, upstream water dependencies and crop production in the Asian Mega-Deltas
title_short Climate change impacts on hydrology, upstream water dependencies and crop production in the Asian Mega-Deltas
title_sort climate change impacts on hydrology upstream water dependencies and crop production in the asian mega deltas
topic food systems
climate change
rivers
water management
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163727
work_keys_str_mv AT biemanshester climatechangeimpactsonhydrologyupstreamwaterdependenciesandcropproductionintheasianmegadeltas
AT demiguelgarciaangel climatechangeimpactsonhydrologyupstreamwaterdependenciesandcropproductionintheasianmegadeltas
AT gulpenmarijn climatechangeimpactsonhydrologyupstreamwaterdependenciesandcropproductionintheasianmegadeltas
AT islamferoz climatechangeimpactsonhydrologyupstreamwaterdependenciesandcropproductionintheasianmegadeltas
AT vanscheltingacatharienterwisscha climatechangeimpactsonhydrologyupstreamwaterdependenciesandcropproductionintheasianmegadeltas
AT nelsonkatherine climatechangeimpactsonhydrologyupstreamwaterdependenciesandcropproductionintheasianmegadeltas
AT mondalmanoranjan climatechangeimpactsonhydrologyupstreamwaterdependenciesandcropproductionintheasianmegadeltas
AT urfelsanton climatechangeimpactsonhydrologyupstreamwaterdependenciesandcropproductionintheasianmegadeltas