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Factors that Increase Vulnerability Physical

Physical Context Exposure to Climate Risk Semiarid climate Precipitation: 100-500 mm/yr 70% precipitation during summer High interannual precipitation variability El Ni ño-Southern Oscillation Extreme weather Summer thunderstorms Tropical cyclones Prone to drought

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Factors that Increase Vulnerability Physical

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  1. Physical Context • Exposure to Climate Risk • Semiarid climate • Precipitation: 100-500 mm/yr • 70% precipitation during summer • High interannual precipitation variability • El Niño-Southern Oscillation • Extreme weather • Summer thunderstorms • Tropical cyclones • Prone to drought • e.g., 1950s, 1800s, 1750s, 1670s, 1560s • Increasing temperatures • Hydrology and Water Resources • Scant surface water resources, but… • Prone to flooding • Bi-national streams and aquifers • Agriculture uses 70-85% of regional groundwater • Groundwater overdraft and salt-water intrusion % of Population Living in Poverty 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 Weiss and Overpeck (2005) note increasing temperatures and a longer frost-free season in the region 5 0 AZ State Nogales Douglas • Institutional Issues • Challenges • Poor binational federal relations, resulting in suspicions of motives • Limited use of science in planning and operations • Bureaucratic inertia • Poor information flows at the transboundary regional scale • e.g., census, maps, economic and hydroclimatic data • Inadequate funding for resource management (Mexico) • Opportunities • Increased local water governance through Mexican • watershed councils (consejos de cuenca) • Binational initiatives • Transboundary Aquifer Assessment Program • Border Governors Conference Water Committee • New emphasis on climate change • State Climate Action Plans (Mexico) • Capacity building through collaborations: • Scientists, NGOs, and stakeholders • Border Climate Summary newsletter* • Development of a culture of water conservation • Drought planning • *http://www.climas.arizona.edu/forecasts.html Above: Areas of substantial groundwater depletion Factors Exacerbating Risk 1. Inefficient irrigation, high evaporative losses 2. Rapid urban growth (above); into fire-prone and rural areas (left) 2 Arizona Sonora 6 1 6. Desalinating ocean water is seen as a desirable adaptation by many water managers 5 • Recent Funding • Inter-American Institute for Global Change Research: “Information Flows and Policy: Use of Climate Diagnostics and Cyclone Prediction for Adaptive Water-Resources Management Under Climatic Uncertainty in Western North America” (http://udallcenter.arizona.edu/iai/index.php) • NOAA Sectoral Applications Research Program: “Moving Forward: Adaptation and Resilience to Climate Change, Drought, and Water Demand in the Urbanizing Southwestern United States and Northern Mexico” • (http://udallcenter.arizona.edu/sarp/) • Project Contacts: • Robert Varady (rvarady@email.arizona.edu) • Margaret Wilder (mwilder@email.arizona.edu) • Chris Scott (cascott@email.arizona.edu) • Gregg Garfin (gmgarfin@email.arizona.edu) 3 4 3. Leaky infrastructure and groundwater depletion to sustain export agriculture 5. Rapid expansion of coastal resorts and retirement communities 4. Rapid urban expansion, but inadequate water delivery, and limited water service (6-8 hr/day) Institutions and Societal Impacts of Climatein the Arizona-Sonora Portionof the U.S.-Mexico Border RegionRobert Varady1, Gregg Garfin1, Margaret Wilder1, Christopher Scott1, Anne Browning-Aiken1, Barbara Morehouse1, Nicolas Pineda5, Ashley Coles1, Jamie McEvoy1, Kate Sammler1, Andrea Ray3, David Gochis4, Tereza Cavazos2, Luis Farfan2, Rolando Diaz11University of Arizona, 2Centro de Investigación Científica y de Educación Superior de Ensenada,3NOAA Earth System Research Laboratory, 4National Center for Atmospheric Research, 5Colegio de Sonora IARU Conference, March 2009 • Aims • Assess climate-related vulnerabilities and impacts in the region • Examine the nexus of climate, institutions, water policy, economic development, and land use practices • Engage in climate knowledge exchange with stakeholders to: • Evaluate the salience and usability of existing climate products • Identify promising avenues for introducing climate science into policymaking and management decisions • Formulate climate science research priorities and questions • Factors that Increase Vulnerability • Physical • Rising temperatures, increasing evaporation, increase in precipitation received during extreme events, increase in length of dry spells • Excess groundwater pumping during drought results in high energy use • Social • High rates of population growth, migration, and rapid urbanization • Competition between urban and rural areas for water resources • Legal • Poor enforcement of water law (Mexico) • Perverse incentives in water law: “Use it or lose it” (U.S.) • Policy and Institutional • NAFTA-catalyzed border industrial and population growth • Leads to increased water demand • Long-term planning hampered by: • Short-term water management appointments • Alternancia – new governments, new priorities • Poor regulation of wastewater use in agriculture • Economic • Poverty and uneven access to resources • Water is undervalued • Commercial agriculture exports huge quantities of “virtual water”

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