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Research unit
EU RFP
Project number
00.0117
Project title
SWURVE: Sustainable water uncertainty, risk and vulnerability in Europe

Texts for this project

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Abstract
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References in databases
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Key words
(English)
Economic Aspects; Environmental Protection; Information Processing; Information Systems
Alternative project number
(English)
EU project number: EVK1-2000-22032
Research programs
(English)
EU-programme: 5. Frame Research Programme - 1.4a.1 Sustainable management and quality of water
Short description
(English)
See abstract
Partners and International Organizations
(English)
Coordinator: University of Newcastle Upon Tyne, Newcastle (UK)
Abstract
(English)
The project aims to develop and validate a methodology to assess the vulnerability and sustainable operation of hydrological systems to climate variability and predicted changes, especially, variability to the great uncertainty in future climate scenarios and to the difficulty of quantifying risks from extremes in inherently variable systems.

Scientific objectives and approach:

SWURVE proposes a two fold strategy for solving these problems in the context of designing and planning for sustainable water and associated activities in Europe:
- Firstly the development of a probabilistic framework for the treatment of future scenarios and their impacts resulting in assigning probabilities of various critical outcomes and risks, rather than single central estimates;
- Secondly, the development of a quantitative and transferable methodology for the measurement of long term sustainability using statistical measures such as reliability, resilience and vulnerability
A range of representative and different case studies will be used to develop and validate these methodologies. The hydrologic systems to be investigated and assessed include conventional water resource systems, but also related and dependent systems, which require further analysis. The studies will define GCM scenarios, rainfall downscaling methods, statistical methods etc. and allow comparison of results.

Problems to be solved:

Many attempts have been made to assess the impacts of changes and variability in climate on crucial hydrologic and hydraulic systems such as those used for flood protection, municipal and agricultural water supply or urban drainage. Such systems can be extremely vulnerable to predicted climate changes, but two major problems have affected the assessment of their vulnerability, and planning of how it can be mitigated or avoided.
- There is great uncertainty inherent in future climate scenarios. This arises from a number of sources, including prediction of greenhouse gas emissions, imperfect climate models and incomplete understanding of how the global climate sensitivity relates to regional and local climates. Dealing with this uncertainty requires consideration of the whole range of possible future scenarios rather than a 'best guess' or arbitrarily selected set of scenarios.
- The risk of failure of various systems, and subsequent vulnerability, is difficult to quantify, as it may depend on the occurrence of extreme events, either singly, in sequence or in combination with other events. Since extreme events by definition occur infrequently, they are therefore difficult to characterise. Quantifying this risk therefore also calls for a probabilistic framework using large ranges or long time series of hydro-meteorological scenarios and possible consequences, demanding the development of novel statistical methodologies.

Expected Impacts:

Improved and transferable methods of measuring performance of hydrologic and hydraulic systems, and impacts under climate change to allow planning and design for a sustainable future.
Methods will be available to address the problems of incorporating uncertainty into impact assessments, using a probabilistic framework to combine different sources of uncertainty and error. The methods will take full account of natural climate variability, uncertainty in climate predictions and uncertainty in future demand.
References in databases
(English)
Swiss Database: Euro-DB of the
State Secretariat for Education and Research
Hallwylstrasse 4
CH-3003 Berne, Switzerland
Tel. +41 31 322 74 82
Swiss Project-Number: 00.0117