Spatio-temporal trends in precipitation and their implications for water resources management in climate-sensitive Nepal
Spatio-temporal trends in precipitation and their implications for water resources management in climate-sensitive Nepal
As one of the world's most water-abundant countries Nepal has plenty of water, yet resources are unevenly distributed, both spatially and temporally. Limited accessibility and poorly managed water resources continue to inhibit socioeconomic development. Poverty levels are high across the nation (57% of the population lives below the international poverty line) and population expansion, coupled with rapid environmental change, is thought to be placing substantial pressure on water resources; an irrefutable asset for sustaining livelihoods and an essential contributing factor for alleviating poverty. Precipitation is a vital water resource for much of the rural population, 80% of which are dependent on rain-fed agriculture for their livelihoods, and fluctuations in which can give rise to changing states of poverty. Here we provide a comprehensive spatiotemporal analysis of precipitation time-series data for Nepal and discuss the contribution of precipitation change to water resources management for this land-locked Himalayan nation. We show that precipitation totals have predominantly remained stable; precipitation extremes and variability indicate widespread decrease; and no clear variation in monsoon onset date is reported. Based on these results, we suggest that water resources management needs to focus on population and environmental pressures, rather than specifically mitigating for precipitation change.
precipitation, trends, nepal, water resources, poverty, livelihoods
138-146
Duncan, John M.A.
928ee263-5675-49f8-91c8-195452126c28
Biggs, Eloise M.
f0afed06-18ac-4a4d-841c-36ea4ff8a3b4
Dash, Jadunandan
51468afb-3d56-4d3a-aace-736b63e9fac8
Atkinson, Peter M.
96e96579-56fe-424d-a21c-17b6eed13b0b
September 2013
Duncan, John M.A.
928ee263-5675-49f8-91c8-195452126c28
Biggs, Eloise M.
f0afed06-18ac-4a4d-841c-36ea4ff8a3b4
Dash, Jadunandan
51468afb-3d56-4d3a-aace-736b63e9fac8
Atkinson, Peter M.
96e96579-56fe-424d-a21c-17b6eed13b0b
Duncan, John M.A., Biggs, Eloise M., Dash, Jadunandan and Atkinson, Peter M.
(2013)
Spatio-temporal trends in precipitation and their implications for water resources management in climate-sensitive Nepal.
Applied Geography, 43, .
(doi:10.1016/j.apgeog.2013.06.011).
Abstract
As one of the world's most water-abundant countries Nepal has plenty of water, yet resources are unevenly distributed, both spatially and temporally. Limited accessibility and poorly managed water resources continue to inhibit socioeconomic development. Poverty levels are high across the nation (57% of the population lives below the international poverty line) and population expansion, coupled with rapid environmental change, is thought to be placing substantial pressure on water resources; an irrefutable asset for sustaining livelihoods and an essential contributing factor for alleviating poverty. Precipitation is a vital water resource for much of the rural population, 80% of which are dependent on rain-fed agriculture for their livelihoods, and fluctuations in which can give rise to changing states of poverty. Here we provide a comprehensive spatiotemporal analysis of precipitation time-series data for Nepal and discuss the contribution of precipitation change to water resources management for this land-locked Himalayan nation. We show that precipitation totals have predominantly remained stable; precipitation extremes and variability indicate widespread decrease; and no clear variation in monsoon onset date is reported. Based on these results, we suggest that water resources management needs to focus on population and environmental pressures, rather than specifically mitigating for precipitation change.
Text
S0143622813001458
- Other
Restricted to Registered users only
Request a copy
More information
Published date: September 2013
Keywords:
precipitation, trends, nepal, water resources, poverty, livelihoods
Organisations:
Global Env Change & Earth Observation
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 355062
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/355062
ISSN: 0143-6228
PURE UUID: b05b91a0-0611-4182-b0f1-e1e728f8a595
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 12 Aug 2013 14:24
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:17
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
John M.A. Duncan
Author:
Peter M. Atkinson
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics