Hydrological extremes and feedbacks in the changing water cycle

Lead Research Organisation: Imperial College London
Department Name: Civil & Environmental Engineering

Abstract

The prospect of significant climate change over the next decades means that society must urgently face up to the implications for the changing water cycle, in particular increasing risks from extreme floods and droughts. Guidance for policy-makers to support adaptation to these risks and to support mitigation strategies to combat climate change is urgently required. However, the ability of climate scientists and hydrologists to predict the possible magnitudes of floods and droughts, and the frequency with which they are expected to occur, is still limited. This is due largely to gaps in knowledge of how best to use available data and models; of particular concern is the limited ability of climate and hydrological models to produce realistic extremes and changing hydrological behaviour. For example, regional climate models produce data which often requires to be downscaled to finer resolutions, but questions arise about what properties of the downscaled data are critical and how the downscaling should be done. As another example, drought planning requires inter-annual and inter-regional rainfall and evaporation to be represented accurately, however there is little guidance about how this can best be achieved under future climate using available models. In addition, there are weaknesses in the simulation of hydrology (for example, groundwater storage, river flows and evaporation) which act as hurdles to development of next generation climate models; in particular models currently used to simulate feedbacks from the earth surface to the atmosphere neglect important hydrological processes. This proposal will produce the science and models needed to address these questions, integrating climate and hydrological science to take impact modelling beyond the current state of the art. Specifically, the proposal: 1. exploits current generation climate science and statistical methods to improve and enhance projections of potential change in hydrologically-relevant metrics over a time-scale of 10 to 60 years, in particular extremes of heavy precipitation and drought; 2. builds on the analysis of historical data to improve scientific understanding and develop innovative methods for the modelling of extremes and non-stationarity in the hydrological response to climate variability; 3. seeks to improve the representation of hydrological processes in land surface models, in particular, the enhanced modelling of surface and subsurface processes for simulation of land-atmosphere feedbacks. In addressing these gaps in knowledge, the proposed project will cross all four themes of NERC's Changing Water Cycle programme: land-atmosphere interactions; precipitation modelling; understanding of change; and innovative ways to assess consequences. Case studies will include the Thames catchment and the Eden catchment. These catchments are broadly representative of lowland and upland UK with substantial climate and hydrological datasets from NERC and DEFRA-EA experimental programmes. This project will consider local to catchment scales, with the view that the resulting science and models will ultimately be integrated into global scale models. The main project outputs will be: 1) improved quantification of future variability and extremes of precipitation and evaporation over hydrologically relevant scales in the UK; 2) improved models of the hydrological water cycle response to these extremes, with the explicit inclusion of non-stationary conditions; 3) the inclusion of earth-atmosphere feedback processes and their effects in climate models, in particular the recognition and inclusion of unsaturated zone and groundwater storage and discharge. In all cases, new modelling tools will be developed to test the ideas of meteo-hydrological functioning.

Publications

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Description New have developed a new method for modelling the behaviour of permeable catchments using the community land surface model JULES through changes in its representation of hydrological processes. This has been applied to the parts of the Thames catchment in order to understand the behaviour of the catchment during flood and drought. The effects of the variability of soils and land used has been explored in order to demonstrate how parameters obtained from a national soils database available from the National Soil Research Institute can be applied at a scale of 1km. In order to investigate the impacts of the changing water cycle, we are using a new downscaling methodology developed by our project partner at UCL to enable us to provide spatially distributed inputs of rainfall and climate data based on historical observations and outputs from global and regional climate models. We have also developed a new approach to modelling the sustainable yield of groundwater abstractions allowing the performance of individual water supply wells to be assessed in the context of the entire catchment. This allows an improved representation of their behaviour during drought, which is providing new guidance to water companies when calculating their deployable output.

Work undertaken by this project was instrumental in obtaining funding for a major 5 year NERC funded project CAMELLIA (Community Water Management for a Liveable London) [NE/S003495/1] under the RISE (Regional Impact of Science in the Enviroment) programme, joiint with Imperial, UCL, BGS and U Oxford, which commenced in Jan 2019.
Exploitation Route We are working with partners in the water industry to develop new ways of assess the yields of conjunctive use catchments during drought and how these might be affected by climate change.

The work undertaken on this project helped underpin CAMELLIA (Community Water Management for a Liveable London) a major proposal to address the need for an integrated water management programme for London funded under NERC's Regional Impact from Science in the Environment (RISE) programme (Project NE/S003495/1) and which will be developing and implementing a number of the key areas of work from the project.

A PhD student funded under the NERC DTP Science Solutions for a Changing Planet (2018 entry) and jointly supervised by Imperial College London and BGS is developing further the work on the Eden catchment.

BGS is taking forward the work on coupling groundwater models with JULES under NERC's Hydro-JULES initiative (https://www.ceh.ac.uk/sites/default/files/documents/BGS%20WP4%20Hydro-JULES%202018-09-10.pdf)
Sectors Environment

URL http://www3.imperial.ac.uk/ewre/research/currentresearch/hydrology/changingwatercycles
 
Description Findings are being used by Thames Water in assessing an alternative approach to calculating the Deployable Output of their groundwater abstraction sources.
First Year Of Impact 2014
Sector Environment,Other
Impact Types Economic