Worst
watershed stresses may become the new normal
24
September, 2013
Nearly
one in 10 U.S. watersheds is "stressed," with demand for
water exceeding natural supply, according to a new analysis of
surface water in the United States. What's more, the lowest water
flow seasons of recent years-times of great stress on rivers,
streams, and sectors that use their waters-are likely to become
typical as climates continue to warm.
"By
midcentury, we expect to see less reliable surface water supplies in
several regions of the United States," said the study's lead
author, Kristen Averyt, associate director for science at the
Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES)
at the University of Colorado Boulder. "This is likely to create
growing challenges for agriculture, electrical suppliers and
municipalities, as there may be more demand for water and less to go
around."
Averyt
and her colleagues evaluated supplies and demands on freshwater
resources for each of the 2,103 watersheds in the continental United
States, using a large suite of existing data sets.
They
identified times of extreme water stress between 1999 and 2007, and
they estimated future surface water stress-using existing climate
projections-for every watershed. In the paper, published online in
Environmental Research Letters on Sept. 17, the authors also
diagnosed the reasons contributing to stress.
Across
the United States, the team found that water supplies are already
stressed (i.e., demands for water outstrip natural supplies) in 193
of the 2,103 watersheds examined. In addition, the researchers
reported:
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The U.S. West is particularly vulnerable to water stress, for two
reasons: 1) the differences between average demand and average supply
are relatively small, so slight shifts in either supplies or demands
can trigger stress, and 2) Western water users have long relied on
imported and stored water to supplement natural supplies, in order to
meet demands.
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In most parts of the country, agriculture requires the most water,
and contributes most to water stress.
+
In Southern California, thirsty cities are the greatest stress on the
surface water system.
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In scattered locations, the cooling water needs of electric power
plants represent the biggest demand on water.
"A
single power plant has the potential to stress surface supplies in a
local area," said co-author James Meldrum, a researcher in the
Western Water Assessment, a program of the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and CIRES. It's critical to
understand how various sectors contribute to the stress on a water
system, Meldrum said, because effective remedies depend on accurate
diagnosis.
Agricultural
and municipal demands are spread among many users, for example,
allowing flexible changes in water use and efficiency of use. "But
because power plant decisions are so capital intensive, they tend to
be locked in for a long time," Meldrum said. "With the
potential for increasing water stress in the next few decades across
parts of the United States, power plants-and our access to
electricity -may be put at risk when water is not adequately
considered in planning."
The
authors deliberately didn't account for future changes in demand for
freshwater. Rather, this analysis was designed to identify the
sensitivity of U.S. watersheds to changes in surface water
availability.
The
researchers hope that the analysis will provide useful information
for people reliant on surface waters. "We hope research like
this helps us understand challenges we might face in building a more
resilient future," Meldrum said.
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