Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Climate Study Predicts Water Shortage in Armenia

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Climate Study Predicts Water Shortage in Armenia

    Climate Study Predicts Water Shortage in Armenia

    Asbarez
    Jan 7th, 2010 .


    BY JASON SOHIGIAN
    >From Cicer et cetera Blog

    The UNDP Armenia has released a thorough and alarming study conducted
    by the Stockholm Environment Institute on The Socio-Economic Impact of
    Climate Change in Armenia. The 130-page report was written by
    Elizabeth A. Stanton, Frank Ackerman, and Flavia Resende, who are
    highly respected experts in the field of environmental economics.
    [Download the report here]

    The study points out that climate change will have far-reaching
    effects on social and economic life, and the ability for people to
    adapt will depend on whether or not funding will be available to
    support adaptive policy measures and how quickly these policies can be
    implemented. `Armenia's future economic development will depend on the
    decisions that the current generation makes about investments in
    adaptation [to climate change],' warns the report.

    According to this UNDP study, national scenarios forecast an increase
    to Armenia's average annual temperature to be 4.5 degrees C in the
    lowlands and 7 degrees C in the highlands over the next century.
    Average annual precipitation is expected to decrease by as much as 9
    percent, with the biggest reductions predicted for Yerevan and the
    Ararat Valley, which can expect 30 percent less precipitation by 2100.
    Higher temperatures will lead to more evaporation which means less
    soil moisture and reductions of up to 24 percent in river flows, which
    will reduce the availability of water for agriculture and power
    generation.

    On an optimistic note, the experts from the Stockholm Environment
    Institute point out that many of the best available climate adaptation
    policy measures can be important for Armenia's economic development.
    These include improving water and power generation infrastructure,
    integrating climate adaptation in plans for economic development and
    energy production, planning for more efficient use of resources in the
    context of growth and higher rates of consumption, and considering the
    needs and vulnerabilities of rural and low income households.

    `Unless quick action is taken on large-scale adaptation measures, it
    is unlikely that Armenian families, their livelihoods, or their
    economy will be unscathed by climate change. Armenia's poor and
    especially its rural poor populations will be particularly
    vulnerable,' warn the authors. `Social impacts will include an
    increased incidence of illness from heat waves as temperatures rise, a
    shortage of water and an increase to electricity tariffs as competing
    needs collide, food shortages or increased food prices as agricultural
    productivity falters, and an increased incidence of dangerous and
    damaging landslides, mudflows, and floods as dry soil and
    deforestation coincide with extreme storms.'

    UNDP representative Dirk Boberg points out that this report is a pilot
    process undertaken by UNDP in only a few countries. He indicates that
    the priority sectors for adaptation to the impacts of climate change
    are water, agriculture, energy, and forests. `[This study] provides
    economic analysis and recommendations for decision-makers that need to
    manage the impacts of climate change by minimizing negative impacts
    and maximizing adaptation opportunities,' he writes in the foreword to
    The Socio-Economic Impact of Climate Change in Armenia.
Working...
X