Projected increased risk of water deficit over major West African river basins under future climates
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Climatic Change
Abstract
Estimating climate change impacts on water resources in West Africa has been challenged by
hydrological data scarcity and inconsistencies in the available climate projections. In this
study, multi-model ensembles of the most recent global and regional climate models output are
used to simulate the hydrologic impacts of climate change in five major river basins (i.e.
Senegal, Gambia, Volta, Niger and Chad) that comprise most of West Africa. Under Representative Concentration Pathways 4.5 and 8.5, the results consistently project substantial
decreases (10 to 40%) in potential water availability across the five major river basins. The
largest changes are projected to occur in the Senegal basin, Gambia basin and the Sahelian part
of the other river basins. The negative trends are steepest after 2050 and in the higher
greenhouse gas forcing scenario. Therefore, in a business-as-usual world, reduced water
availability combined with the region’s rapidly growing population will have West Africa
facing an unprecedented water deficit during the second half of the twenty-first century.
However, greenhouse gas mitigation can help reduce this deficit. In the Volta basin, although
potential water availability declines considerably, precipitation exceeds potential evapotranspiration during the monsoon season in both forcing scenarios, suggesting opportunities for
adaptation.
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Research Article