Der Bericht beschreibt die Aktivitäten des Projekts RADOST in den fünf Modulen „Netzwerk und Dialog“, „Natur- und ingenieurwissenschaftliche Forschung“, „Sozio-ökonomische Analyse“, „Nationaler und europäischer Politikrahmen/ nationaler und internationaler Austausch“ und „Kommunikation und Verbreitung der Ergebnisse“ und deckt den Zeitraum von April 2012 bis Januar 2013 ab.
The work presented here is part of the socioeconomic analysis that is carried out within the RADOST project. It has been the starting point of developing a dynamic regionalized Input-Output (IO) model that is used to assess the effects of climate change and adaptation strategies on the regional economy. In a first step the model has been set up for the tourist sector in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. The possible developments of the tourism demand – influenced by climate change and other factors – were represented in three scenarios, which in turn were used as input data for the IO model.
Abstract
Water management and environmental protection is vulnerable to extreme low flows during streamflow droughts. During the last decades, in most rivers of Central Europe summer runoff and low flows have decreased. Discharge projections agree that future decrease in runoff is likely for catchments in Brandenburg, Germany. Depending on the first-order controls on low flows, different adaption measures are expected to be appropriate. Small catchments were analyzed because they are expected to be more vulnerable to a changing climate than larger rivers. They are mainly headwater catchments with smaller ground water storage. Local characteristics are more important at this scale and can increase vulnerability.
This thesis mutually evaluates potential adaption measures to sustain minimum runoff in small catchments of Brandenburg, Germany, and similarities of these catchments regarding low flows. The following guiding questions are addressed: (i) Which first-order controls on low flows and related time scales exist? (ii) Which are the differences between small catchments regarding low flow vulnerability? (iii) Which adaption measures to sustain minimum runoff in small catchments of Brandenburg are appropriate considering regional low flow patterns?
Potential adaption measures to sustain minimum runoff during periods of low flows can be classified into three categories: (i) increase of groundwater recharge and subsequent baseflow by land use change, land management and artificial ground water recharge, (ii) increase of water storage with regulated outflow by reservoirs, lakes and wetland water management and (iii) regional low flow patterns have to be considered during planning of measures with multiple purposes (urban water management, waste water recycling and inter-basin water transfer). The question remained whether water management of areas with shallow groundwater tables can efficiently sustain minimum runoff. Exemplary, water management scenarios of a ditch irrigated area were evaluated using the model Hydrus-2D. Increasing antecedent water levels and stopping ditch irrigation during periods of low flows increased fluxes from the pasture to the stream, but storage was depleted faster during the summer months due to higher evapotranspiration. Fluxes from this approx. 1 km long pasture with an area of approx. 13 ha ranged from 0.3 to 0.7 ls-1 depending on scenario. This demonstrates that numerous of such small decentralized measures are necessary to sustain minimum runoff in meso-scale catchments.
Differences in the low flow risk of catchments and meteorological low flow predictors were analyzed. A principal component analysis was applied on daily discharge of 37 catchments between 1991 and 2006. Flows decreased more in Southeast Brandenburg according to meteorological forcing. Low flow risk was highest in a region east of Berlin because of intersection of a more continental climate and the specific geohydrology. In these catchments, flows decreased faster during summer and the low flow period was prolonged. A non-linear support vector machine regression was applied to iteratively select meteorological predictors for annual 30-day minimum runoff in 16 catchments between 1965 and 2006. The potential evapotranspiration sum of the previous 48 months was the most important predictor (r2 = 0.28). The potential evapotranspiration of the previous 3 months and the precipitation of the previous 3 months and last year increased model performance (r2 = 0.49, including all four predictors). Model performance was higher for catchments with low yield and more damped runoff. In catchments with high low flow risk, explanatory power of long term potential evapotranspiration was high.
Catchments with a high low flow risk as well as catchments with a considerable decrease in flows in southeast Brandenburg have the highest demand for adaption. Measures increasing groundwater recharge are to be preferred. Catchments with high low flow risk showed relatively deep and decreasing groundwater heads allowing increased groundwater recharge at recharge areas with higher altitude away from the streams. Low flows are expected to stay low or decrease even further because long term potential evapotranspiration was the most important low flow predictor and is projected to increase during climate change. Differences in low flow risk and runoff dynamics between catchments have to be considered for management and planning of measures which do not only have the task to sustain minimum runoff.
Der Bericht "Auswirkungen des Klimawandels auf die Emission aus Kanalnetzen - Strategien zur Verringerung der Frachtspitzen" repräsentiert das REGKLAM-Produkt 3.2.4c. Im Betrieb von Kanalisation und Kläranlagen sind sowohl das häufigere Auftreten von Starkniederschlägen als auch die Tendenz zu längeren Trockenperioden von großer Bedeutung. Bei langen Trockenperioden ist grundsätzlich von einer höheren Stoffakkumulation an der Oberfläche und verstärkter Bildung von Kanalsedimenten auszugehen. Dieser Bericht widmet sich den Schmutzfrachtprozessen im urbanen Entwässerungssystem. Es werden kritische Belastungen identifiziert und mit den verursachenden meteorologischen Einflussfaktoren korreliert.
This work deal with a comparison between the common
"bathtub method" and a state-of-the-art hydrodynamic model, called MIKE21 HD Flow Model, for modelling storm surges. The aim of this study is to work out the differences between both approaches and to find out how probable differences look like. There is the question if the "bathtub method" represents flooding adequate or, if the consideration of physics by hydrodynamic models makes a major difference and displays maybe the "real" risk of
inundations. This work tries to underline the differences between those two approaches, where the strengths and weaknesses are and what influence those differences have for an inundation analysis. The investigation was made on a digital elevation model for the study area of Kiel, the capital city of the state Schleswig-Holstein in Germany. The two approaches were made on data for a small storm surge on the basis of water-level-change and wind-regime data from 2010.
Regional climate change projections show a changing climate in the metropolitan region of Hamburg for the end of the century: The temperature could increase and the precipitation in summer could decrease. To cope with the probably longer lasting and hotter summer conditions in Europe there are different possible adaptation measures in land management practice, e.g. forest conversion. That means the conversion of mostly coniferous forest monocultures to deciduous and mixed forests. Mixed forests are generally more adaptable in comparison to conifer forests. They ensure an increased groundwater recharge because of less canopy interception and reduced transpiration outside the growing season. An interesting question is how forest conversion would feedback to the regional climate under different climate conditions. To explore climate feedbacks, REMO (regional climate model at the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, Hamburg) is applied. To get a more realistic representation of the land surface, a current dataset from a digital basis landscape model of the Federal Agency for Cartography and Geodesy is used instead of the standard representation of the land surface in REMO. In some areas of the metropolitan region of Hamburg the updated land surface increases the forest fraction. Additionally, all coniferous forest types are converted into broadleaf forest types to study the maximum impact on the simulated near surface climate. This set-up is used for a climate simulation with REMO, forced by ERA-INTERIM reanalysis data for the period of 1990-2008. Selected climate variables are analyzed and the associated processes are investigated: The different forest distributions affect particularly the evapotranspiration and thus the water- and energy cycle of the soil and the lower atmosphere. Especially, the effects in the very hot and dry year 2003 and in the wet year 2002 are analyzed. To study the impacts of the forest distributions under different climate conditions, a second climate simulation is set up with REMO, forced by ECHAM5-MPIOM for the historical period 1970-2000 and for the future time periods 2035-2065 and 2070-2100 under A1B emissions. This allows analyzing the impact of a changed forest cover under different climate conditions. It gives a first estimation of climate sensitivity.
Der Bericht "Grundwasserbewirtschaftung und Klimawandel - Handlungsansätze für Planungsträger und Genehmigungsbehörden" repräsentiert das REGKLAM-Produkt 3.2.2e. In diesem Handlungsleitfaden werden den kommunalen Planungsträgern und Genehmigungsbehörden einige Ansätze zur Beurteilung der langfristigen Genehmigungsfähigkeit grundwasserwirtschaftlicher Vorhaben unter Berücksichtigung der prognostizierten Effekte des Klimawandels sowie Strategien und Maßnahmen vorgeschlagen, die für den Bereich der Grundwasserbewirtschaftung einen Beitrag zur Anpassung an die sich verändernden Dargebote leisten können.
Vorstellung von Projektergebnissen aus KLIMZUG-NORD bezüglich jährliche und saisonale Temperatur- und Niederschlagsänderungen zur Mitte und Ende des 21. Jahrhunderts, sowie Ergebnisse aus dem Projekt Hamburg 2K. In Hamburg 2K wird analysiert, was eine Begrenzung auf eine Temperaturänderung von 2K für Hamburg bedeutet. Ausgewertet wurden Temperatur- und Niederschlagsänderungen sowie ausgewählte Indices.
Im Forschungs- und Netzwerkprojekt dynaklim untersucht die Emschergenossenschaft u. a. die wasserwirtschaftlichen Auswirkungen von klimabedingten Veränderungen des Grundwasserhaushalts in den urbanen Siedlungsgebieten. Dazu sollen mit Hilfe der vorliegenden numerischen Grundwassermodelle unter Berücksichtigung der Realisationsergebnisse des regionalen Klimamodells COSMOCLM realistische Auswirkungsszenarien und Anpassungsstrategien für die Siedlungsentwässerung abgeleitet werden. Zur Abbildung der innerjährlichen Verschiebungen der Niederschläge ist es erforderlich, die Grundwasserneubildung als ausschlaggebende Wasserhaushaltsgröße für die Modellierung instationär und flächendifferenziert zu berechnen. Da bislang keine verifizierten instationären Wasserhaushaltsmodellansätze verfügbar sind, wurde in Anlehnung an die bisher bekannten Verfahren ein geeignetes Werkzeug entwickelt, dass bei der instationären Erweiterung der stationär kalibrierten Grundwassermodelle die Massenbilanz erhält. Die flächendifferenzierte Grundwasserneubildung für das Einzugsgebiet der Emscher für die Zeitschnitte 1961-1990, 2021-2050 und 2071-2100 wurde berechnet und die Ergebnisse auf Teileinzugsgebietsebene analysiert. Aus der klimatischen Bodenwasserbilanz wurden Trends bis zu den Jahren 2050 und 2100 im Emschergebiet berechnet.