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Kainji_Lake_River Niger_ESA_Lennard3

Potential impacts of stratospheric aerosol geoengineering on droughts over major river basins in Africa

Modelling
South Africa | Lennard
Extreme weather - droughts, Hydrology

Summary

African river basins face high drought risks due to climate change. This study shows that stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI) could reduce droughts caused by heat. However, SAI also reduces rainfall, which increases other types of droughts. This makes future drought predictions more certain. While SAI prevents the most extreme heat-driven droughts, it also raises the minimum level of drought risk, potentially making water management more difficult.

Abstract

Most socio-economic activities in Africa depend on the continent’s river basins, but effectively managing drought risks over the basins in response to climate change remains a big challenge. While studies have shown that the stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI) intervention could mitigate temperature-related climate change impacts over Africa, there is a dearth of information on how the SAI intervention could influence drought characteristics and drought risk managements over the river basins. The present study thus examines the potential impacts of climate change and the SAI intervention on droughts and drought management over the major river basins in Africa. Multi-ensemble climate simulation datasets from the Stratospheric Aerosol Geoengineering Large Ensemble (GLENS) Project were analysed for the study. The Standardized Precipitation Evapotranspiration Index (SPEI) and the Standardized Precipitation Index (SPI) were used to characterize the upper and lower limits of future drought severity, respectively, over the basins. The SPEI is a function of rainfall and potential evapotranspiration, whereas the SPI is only a function of rainfall, so the difference between the two indices is influenced by atmospheric evaporative demand. The results of the study show that, while the SAI intervention, as simulated in GLENS, may offset the impacts of climate change on temperature and atmospheric evaporative demand, the level of SAI that compensates for temperature change would overcompensate for the impacts on precipitation and therefore impose a climate water balance deficit in the tropics. SAI would narrow the gaps between SPEI and SPI projections over the basins by reducing SPEI drought frequency through reduced temperature and atmospheric evaporative demand while increasing SPI drought frequency through reduced rainfall. The narrowing of this gap lowers the level of uncertainty regarding future changes in drought frequency, but nonetheless has implications for future drought management in the basins, because while SAI lowers the upper limit of the future drought stress, it also raises the lower limit of the drought stress.

Publication data

Journal: Climate Change
Date: 15 December 2021
DOI: 10.1007/s10584-021-03268-w

Authors

Babatunde Joseph Abiodun

University of Cape Town

Romaric Odoulami

University of Cape Town

Windmanagda Sawadogo

University of Cape Town & University of Augsburg

Olumuyiwa Ayotunde Oloniyo

University of Cape Town

Mark New

University of Cape Town & University of East Anglia

Chris Lennard

University of Cape Town

Izidine Pinto

University of Cape Town

Temitope Samuel Egbebiyi

University of Cape Town

Doug MacMartin

Cornell University & California Institute of Technology

Abayomi A. Abatan

University of Exeter

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