Climate-Driven or Human-Induced: Indicating Severe Water Scarcity in the Moulouya River Basin (Morocco)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Contextual Background
2.1. The Case Study Area—Moulouya River Basin in North-Eastern Morocco
2.2. Measuring Water Scarcity—Indicators, Approaches, Limitations and Critique
Index (year) | Approach and benefits | Limitations |
---|---|---|
Falkenmark Water Stress Index (1989) [8] | ● Total annual renewable water resources available to the population (per cap/year freshwater availability). ● Determines thresholds for minimum per capita water requirements. ● Data most often available as well on regional or smaller scales. ● Easy to apply and intuitively understandable. | ● Focus on blue water stress only, omits green water. ● Excludes main drivers for water scarcity, e.g., demand, efficiency, management and lifestyles. ● Societal adaptive capacity is not included. ● Assumes that all countries globally use or need the same amount of water for development. |
Social Water Stress Index (2000) [46] | ● Builds on the Falkenmark indicator and applies the UNDP’s Human Development Index (HDI) to depict the social dimension of water scarcity. ● Contextualizes water stress with a low social adaptive capacity. | ● The HDI does not include ecological factors and focuses mainly on economic criteria [50]. ● The HDI does not depict intra-national differences, as the data applied is country-based only. |
Water Resources Vulnerability Index (criticality ratio) (2000) [47] | ● Withdrawal-Ratio of human water use to total renewable water resources. ● Comparison of country-specific water demand and availability. ● Scarcity: proportion of total withdrawals relative to total available resources. | ● Role of non-natural resources (e.g., desalinization), recycled or re-used water is not considered. ● Omits behavioral change as a reaction towards lowering water capacities, e.g., the implementation of new technologies. |
Physical and Economical Scarcity Indicators (2007) [11] | ● Accounts for all renewable water resources available for primary supply under future scenarios of improved water management policies, e.g., infrastructure development and irrigation efficiency. ● Physical scarcity: countries being unable to meet future demands despite future adaptive capacity (e.g., investments in water infrastructures). ● Economical scarcity: countries unable to meet future water demand without investments in water infrastructures despite sufficient renewable resources. | ● Measuring of indicator is very complex and time-consuming. ● Data requirements difficult to meet, thus it’s mainly based on expert judgments. ● Omits ability to adapt by virtual water imports (food) or water saving devices. ● Partly green and blue water are summed up, providing too high potential availability values. ● Country-based aggregated analysis. |
Water Poverty Index (2003) [31] | ● Determines water security at household and community level based on income and wealth. ● Measures and aggregates five dimensions: level of access to water; water quantity, quality and variability; water used for domestic, food, and productive purposes; capacity for water management; environmental aspects. | ● Focuses on limitations of the Falkenmark Index. ● Comprehensive amounts of data required. ● Approach of high complexity. ● Lacks intuitive understanding. ● Suited for smaller rather than national scales. |
- It does not differentiate between countries regarding their specific water stress thresholds (one country might be able to handle a 500 m3 per capita annual availability; another might be experiencing severe water problems at that level);
- It focuses on natural freshwater availability only and does not include man-made freshwater sources (e.g., desalinization) or the accessibility of water;
Indicating Water Stress with the Falkenmark Index (FI)
Water availability (per capita in m3)a | Level of water stress | Water resource management problems and constraints |
---|---|---|
>1700 | Occasional or local water stress | No or limited problems |
1700–1000 | Regular water stress | Heavy pressures on water resources, general management problems |
1000–500 | Chronic water scarcity | Chronic water shortages/limitation to economic development and human health and well-being |
<500 | Absolute water scarcity | Beyond availability limit; beyond the water barrier of manageable capability, main constraint to life |
3. Methodology
3.1. Data
3.2. Indicators for Regional Water Availability in the Moulouya River Basin
3.2.1. Precipitation and Temperature Trends
3.2.2. Potential Evapotranspiration (Pot.ET) in the Moulouya River Basin
3.2.3. The Climatic Water Balance (CWB) in the Moulouya River Basin
3.2.4. Regional Population Trend
3.2.5 Calculation of Regional Per Capita Water Availability for 2006–2040
4. Results
4.1 Climate Impacts on the Water Regional Budget
Season | DJF | MAM | JJA | SON |
---|---|---|---|---|
Seasonal mean in mm 1971–2005 (reference baseline 1936–1970) | 145 (124) | 110 (111) | 18 (20) | 89 (83) |
Trend (change) | −21% | 0 | 2% | −6% |
Statistical significance (α = 0.05) | 0.024 | 0.77 | 0.13 | 0.096 |
Significance level | Highly significant | not | not | Slightly significant |
4.2 Impacts for Regional Per Capita Water Availability
5. Discussion
- A mean annual precipitation decrease for 1971–2005 (−7%);
- A significant decrease of winter precipitation (−21%);
- A slightly significant drying trend for autumn 1971–2005 (−6%);
- A significant temperature increase for December 1971–2005 (+6.8 °C); and
- A 13% decrease of the regional CWB for 1971–2005.
- A very likely increase of regional water demand due to population growth;
- A reinforcing trend of the critical per capita water supply situation (below 500 m3); and
- A very likely establishment of a permanent water deficit situation.
Implications for Regional Water Management
6. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
References
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Tekken, V.; Kropp, J.P. Climate-Driven or Human-Induced: Indicating Severe Water Scarcity in the Moulouya River Basin (Morocco). Water 2012, 4, 959-982. https://doi.org/10.3390/w4040959
Tekken V, Kropp JP. Climate-Driven or Human-Induced: Indicating Severe Water Scarcity in the Moulouya River Basin (Morocco). Water. 2012; 4(4):959-982. https://doi.org/10.3390/w4040959
Chicago/Turabian StyleTekken, Vera, and Jürgen P. Kropp. 2012. "Climate-Driven or Human-Induced: Indicating Severe Water Scarcity in the Moulouya River Basin (Morocco)" Water 4, no. 4: 959-982. https://doi.org/10.3390/w4040959