2009
DOI: 10.5194/hess-13-247-2009
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HESS Opinions: "Climate, hydrology, energy, water: recognizing uncertainty and seeking sustainability"

Abstract: Abstract. Since 1990 extensive funds have been spent on research in climate change. Although Earth Sciences, including climatology and hydrology, have benefited significantly, progress has proved incommensurate with the effort and funds, perhaps because these disciplines were perceived as "tools" subservient to the needs of the climate change enterprise rather than autonomous sciences. At the same time, research was misleadingly focused more on the "symptom", i.e. the emission of greenhouse gases, than on the … Show more

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Cited by 78 publications
(46 citation statements)
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“…The effect of human activities on the water cycle is deepening and widening rapidly across the planet, driven by increased demands for energy (King and Webber, 2008;Koutsoyiannis et al, 2009), water (Jackson et al, 2001), food (Vörösmarty et al, 2001) and living space (Zhao et al, 2001), and the unintended consequences and secondary effects of land use and climate change. Cumulatively, these demands result in increased human appropriation of water resources, significant modification of landscapes, and a strong human imprint on water cycle dynamics from local to global scales (Carpenter et al, 2011;Falkenmark and Lannerstad, 2005;Röckstrom et al, 2009;Vörösmarty et al, 2010).…”
Section: Predictions Under Changementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The effect of human activities on the water cycle is deepening and widening rapidly across the planet, driven by increased demands for energy (King and Webber, 2008;Koutsoyiannis et al, 2009), water (Jackson et al, 2001), food (Vörösmarty et al, 2001) and living space (Zhao et al, 2001), and the unintended consequences and secondary effects of land use and climate change. Cumulatively, these demands result in increased human appropriation of water resources, significant modification of landscapes, and a strong human imprint on water cycle dynamics from local to global scales (Carpenter et al, 2011;Falkenmark and Lannerstad, 2005;Röckstrom et al, 2009;Vörösmarty et al, 2010).…”
Section: Predictions Under Changementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this regard, it is relevant to point that we have obtained mean variations of rainfall (both P and r) in MSs that are proportional to the mean annual water volume applied in the neighbouring upwind irrigation lands. This result might help to reduce the modelling uncertainty in the simulated strength of the irrigation-rainfall feedback , and lends support to climate models, whose credibility is a controversial issue in itself (Koutsoyiannis et al, 2009).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The use of telemetered rainfall has been in use for decades [18], and it is significant that some staff of climate change on future flooding will be difficult to prove, especially in view of the recent slow down of global temperature rise [19]. The call for more research when the solution to many flood problems is clear suggests that the study of floods has become a grow industry in itself as described by Whitmarsh [20].…”
Section: Understandingmentioning
confidence: 99%