TY - JOUR
T1 - Evolution of Drought Mitigation and Water Security Through 100 Years of Reservoir Expansion in Semi-Arid Brazil
AU - Meira Neto, Antônio Alves
AU - Medeiros, Pedro
AU - de Araújo, José Carlos
AU - Pereira, Bruno
AU - Sivapalan, Murugesu
N1 - CAPES: for the doctorate scholarship to Bruno Pereira and for funding the research stay of Pedro Medeiros at the University of Illinois at Urbana\u2010Champaign, which originated this work (Finance code 001: Visiting Professorship Program 2017/2018, call no 45/2017, Grant 88881.173213/2018\u201001). CNPq: for the research productivity fellowship granted to Pedro Medeiros and Jos\u00E9 Carlos de Ara\u00FAjo.
CAPES: for the doctorate scholarship to Bruno Pereira and for funding the research stay of Pedro Medeiros at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, which originated this work (Finance code 001: Visiting Professorship Program 2017/2018, call no 45/2017, Grant 88881.173213/2018-01). CNPq: for the research productivity fellowship granted to Pedro Medeiros and Jos\u00E9 Carlos de Ara\u00FAjo.
PY - 2024/9
Y1 - 2024/9
N2 - Brazil's Northeast region (BRN), especially the state of Ceará (CE), has dealt historically with severe drought events since the late 1800s, which commonly led to catastrophic impacts of mass migration and deaths of thousands of people. Throughout the last century, the “Droughts Polygon” region experienced an intense infrastructural development, with the expansion of a dense network of reservoirs. This paper presents a parsimonious hydrologic modeling approach to investigate the 100-year (1920–2020) evolution of the hydrology of the 24,500 km2 Upper Jaguaribe Basin, throughout the development of a dense reservoir network. We aimed at reproducing the hydrology at the basin scale and analyzed the outcomes of reservoir expansion in terms of water fluxes and water security. Our model's structure captured the growth in reservoir count and storage capacity, which was then confronted with an evolving water demand, allowing us to estimate how water security (i.e., proportion of demand being met) varied over the 100-year period. Significant streamflow reduction at the basin's outlet and increase in evaporation losses, associated with a decrease in streamflow at varying exceedance frequencies were observed at the end of the study period. While reservoir expansion allowed for the transition from complete vulnerability to meteorological droughts to increased levels of water security, drought impacts had, in the meantime, disproportionally intensified, especially in reservoirs of medium to small capacities. Smaller reservoirs are suggested to have played the role of distributing water resources throughout the region, while larger reservoirs were more efficient as tools to promote water security.
AB - Brazil's Northeast region (BRN), especially the state of Ceará (CE), has dealt historically with severe drought events since the late 1800s, which commonly led to catastrophic impacts of mass migration and deaths of thousands of people. Throughout the last century, the “Droughts Polygon” region experienced an intense infrastructural development, with the expansion of a dense network of reservoirs. This paper presents a parsimonious hydrologic modeling approach to investigate the 100-year (1920–2020) evolution of the hydrology of the 24,500 km2 Upper Jaguaribe Basin, throughout the development of a dense reservoir network. We aimed at reproducing the hydrology at the basin scale and analyzed the outcomes of reservoir expansion in terms of water fluxes and water security. Our model's structure captured the growth in reservoir count and storage capacity, which was then confronted with an evolving water demand, allowing us to estimate how water security (i.e., proportion of demand being met) varied over the 100-year period. Significant streamflow reduction at the basin's outlet and increase in evaporation losses, associated with a decrease in streamflow at varying exceedance frequencies were observed at the end of the study period. While reservoir expansion allowed for the transition from complete vulnerability to meteorological droughts to increased levels of water security, drought impacts had, in the meantime, disproportionally intensified, especially in reservoirs of medium to small capacities. Smaller reservoirs are suggested to have played the role of distributing water resources throughout the region, while larger reservoirs were more efficient as tools to promote water security.
KW - coevolution
KW - droughts
KW - reservoir
KW - semi-arid
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85202753061&partnerID=8YFLogxK
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U2 - 10.1029/2023WR036411
DO - 10.1029/2023WR036411
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85202753061
SN - 0043-1397
VL - 60
JO - Water Resources Research
JF - Water Resources Research
IS - 9
M1 - e2023WR036411
ER -