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Demand modulation of water scarcity sensitivities to secular climatic variation: theoretical insights from a computational maquette
Authors:Sean W Fleming
Institution:1. Meteorological Service of Canada, Environment Canada, Vancouver, Canadasfleming@eos.ubc.ca
Abstract:ABSTRACT

Increased demand associated with population or economic growth, and decreased supply under some climatic shifts, obviously contribute to water scarcity. As a fresh perspective, we offer a generic theoretical treatment using a computational “maquette”, employing parameterizations to avoid assumptions about the origin and scale of climate and demand changes. The results suggest a distinct (and more subtle) point: the sensitivities of water stress to changes in both the mean and the variance of hydroclimate are modulated by demand level. Theoretical behaviours generated by the reduced-complexity model are surprisingly intricate, including profound nonlinearities and bifurcations. These may form a lower bound on the dynamical complexity of the demand–supply–scarcity nexus. Overall, the outcomes suggest that demand growth substantially intensifies and nonlinearizes water stress sensitivities to secular climate variation, and, in particular, that the interactions between demand changes and second-order hydroclimatic non-stationarity may produce non-intuitive water scarcity impacts requiring much closer study.
EDITOR A. Castellarin; ASSOCIATE EDITOR N. Ilich
Keywords:Water scarcity  relative water demand  population growth  climate variability and change  nonlinear effects  heteroscedasticity
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