Severe Drought in Finland: Modeling Effects on Water Resources and Assessing Climate Change Impacts

Severe droughts cause substantial damage to different socio-economic sectors, and even Finland, which has abundant water resources, is not immune to their impacts. To assess the implications of a severe drought in Finland, we carried out a national scale drought impact analysis. Firstly, we simulate...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sustainability 2019-04, Vol.11 (8), p.2450
Hauptverfasser: Veijalainen, Noora, Ahopelto, Lauri, Marttunen, Mika, Jääskeläinen, Jaakko, Britschgi, Ritva, Orvomaa, Mirjam, Belinskij, Antti, Keskinen, Marko
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Severe droughts cause substantial damage to different socio-economic sectors, and even Finland, which has abundant water resources, is not immune to their impacts. To assess the implications of a severe drought in Finland, we carried out a national scale drought impact analysis. Firstly, we simulated water levels and discharges during the severe drought of 1939–1942 (the reference drought) in present-day Finland with a hydrological model. Secondly, we estimated how climate change would alter droughts. Thirdly, we assessed the impact of drought on key water use sectors, with a focus on hydropower and water supply. The results indicate that the long-lasting reference drought caused the discharges to decrease at most by 80% compared to the average annual minimum discharges. The water levels generally fell to the lowest levels in the largest lakes in Central and South-Eastern Finland. Climate change scenarios project on average a small decrease in the lowest water levels during droughts. Severe drought would have a significant impact on water-related sectors, reducing water supply and hydropower production. In this way drought is a risk multiplier for the water–energy–food security nexus. We suggest that the resilience to droughts could be improved with region-specific drought management plans and by including droughts in existing regional preparedness exercises.
ISSN:2071-1050
2071-1050
DOI:10.3390/su11082450