An assessment of the economic impact of climate change on the water sector in Grenada

Changing precipitation patterns and temperature relate directly to water resources and water security. This report presents the findings of an assessment of the water sector in Grenada with respect to the projected impact of climate change. Grenada‘s water resources comprise primarily surface water...

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Otros Autores: NU. CEPAL. Sede Subregional para el Caribe
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: ECLAC, Subregional Headquarters for the Caribbean 2015
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/11362/38580
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id oai-11362-38580
record_format dspace
institution Cepal
collection Cepal
language English
topic DESARROLLO SOSTENIBLE
CAMBIO CLIMATICO
RECURSOS HIDRICOS
ORDENAMIENTO DE LAS AGUAS
TEMPERATURA
CLIMA
ABASTECIMIENTO DE AGUA
INVESTIGACION DEMOGRAFICA
COLONIZACION RURAL
TURISMO
CONSTRUCCION
INVESTIGACION GEOFISICA
ANALISIS COSTO-BENEFICIO
POLITICA AMBIENTAL
ASPECTOS ECONOMICOS
POLITICA ENERGETICA
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
CLIMATE CHANGE
WATER RESOURCES
WATER MANAGEMENT
TEMPERATURE
CLIMATE
WATER SUPPLY
DEMOGRAPHIC RESEARCH
LAND SETTLEMENT
TOURISM
CONSTRUCTION
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH
COST-BENEFIT ANALYSIS
ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY
ECONOMIC ASPECTS
ENERGY POLICY
spellingShingle DESARROLLO SOSTENIBLE
CAMBIO CLIMATICO
RECURSOS HIDRICOS
ORDENAMIENTO DE LAS AGUAS
TEMPERATURA
CLIMA
ABASTECIMIENTO DE AGUA
INVESTIGACION DEMOGRAFICA
COLONIZACION RURAL
TURISMO
CONSTRUCCION
INVESTIGACION GEOFISICA
ANALISIS COSTO-BENEFICIO
POLITICA AMBIENTAL
ASPECTOS ECONOMICOS
POLITICA ENERGETICA
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
CLIMATE CHANGE
WATER RESOURCES
WATER MANAGEMENT
TEMPERATURE
CLIMATE
WATER SUPPLY
DEMOGRAPHIC RESEARCH
LAND SETTLEMENT
TOURISM
CONSTRUCTION
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH
COST-BENEFIT ANALYSIS
ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY
ECONOMIC ASPECTS
ENERGY POLICY
An assessment of the economic impact of climate change on the water sector in Grenada
description Changing precipitation patterns and temperature relate directly to water resources and water security. This report presents the findings of an assessment of the water sector in Grenada with respect to the projected impact of climate change. Grenada‘s water resources comprise primarily surface water, with an estimated groundwater potential to satisfy about 10%-15% of the present potable requirement. On the smaller islands Carriacou and Petite Martinique, domestic water is derived exclusively from rainwater catchments. Rainfall seasonality is marked and the available surface water during the dry season declines dramatically. Changing land use patterns, increase in population, expansion in tourism and future implementation of proposed irrigation schemes are projected to increase future water requirements. Economic modeling approaches were implemented to estimate sectoral demand and supply between 2011 and 2050. Residential, tourism and domestic demand were analysed for the A2, B2 and BAU scenarios as illustrated. The results suggest that water supply will exceed forecasted water demand under B2 and BAU during all four decades. However under the A2 scenario, water demand will exceed water supply by the year 2025. It is important to note that the model has been constrained by the omission of several key parameters, and time series for climate indicators, data for which are unavailable. Some of these include time series for discharge data, rainfall-runoff data, groundwater recharge rates, and evapotranspiration. Further, the findings which seem to indicate adequacy of water are also masked by seasonality in a given year, variation from year to year, and spatial variation within the nation state. It is imperative that some emphasis be placed on data generation in order to better project for the management of Grenada‘s water security. This analysis indicates the need for additional water catchment, storage and distribution infrastructure, as well as institutional strengthening, in order to meet the future needs of the Grenadian population. Strategic priorities should be adopted to increase water production, increase efficiency, strengthen the institutional framework, and decrease wastage. Grenada has embarked on several initiatives that can be considered strategies toward adaptation to the variabilities associated with climate change. The Government should ensure that these programs be carried out to the optimal levels for reasons described above. The ―no-regrets approach‖ which intimates that measures will be beneficial with or without climate change should be adopted. A study on the Costs of Inaction for the Caribbean in the face of climate change listed Grenada among the countries which would experience significant impacts on GDP between now and 2100 without adaptation interventions. Investment in the water sector is germane to building Grenada‘s capacity to cope with the multivariate impact of changes in the parameters of climate.
author2 NU. CEPAL. Sede Subregional para el Caribe
author_facet NU. CEPAL. Sede Subregional para el Caribe
format Texto
title An assessment of the economic impact of climate change on the water sector in Grenada
title_short An assessment of the economic impact of climate change on the water sector in Grenada
title_full An assessment of the economic impact of climate change on the water sector in Grenada
title_fullStr An assessment of the economic impact of climate change on the water sector in Grenada
title_full_unstemmed An assessment of the economic impact of climate change on the water sector in Grenada
title_sort assessment of the economic impact of climate change on the water sector in grenada
publisher ECLAC, Subregional Headquarters for the Caribbean
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11362/38580
_version_ 1718443031947902976
spelling oai-11362-385802021-11-04T12:39:31Z An assessment of the economic impact of climate change on the water sector in Grenada NU. CEPAL. Sede Subregional para el Caribe DESARROLLO SOSTENIBLE CAMBIO CLIMATICO RECURSOS HIDRICOS ORDENAMIENTO DE LAS AGUAS TEMPERATURA CLIMA ABASTECIMIENTO DE AGUA INVESTIGACION DEMOGRAFICA COLONIZACION RURAL TURISMO CONSTRUCCION INVESTIGACION GEOFISICA ANALISIS COSTO-BENEFICIO POLITICA AMBIENTAL ASPECTOS ECONOMICOS POLITICA ENERGETICA SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT CLIMATE CHANGE WATER RESOURCES WATER MANAGEMENT TEMPERATURE CLIMATE WATER SUPPLY DEMOGRAPHIC RESEARCH LAND SETTLEMENT TOURISM CONSTRUCTION GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH COST-BENEFIT ANALYSIS ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY ECONOMIC ASPECTS ENERGY POLICY Changing precipitation patterns and temperature relate directly to water resources and water security. This report presents the findings of an assessment of the water sector in Grenada with respect to the projected impact of climate change. Grenada‘s water resources comprise primarily surface water, with an estimated groundwater potential to satisfy about 10%-15% of the present potable requirement. On the smaller islands Carriacou and Petite Martinique, domestic water is derived exclusively from rainwater catchments. Rainfall seasonality is marked and the available surface water during the dry season declines dramatically. Changing land use patterns, increase in population, expansion in tourism and future implementation of proposed irrigation schemes are projected to increase future water requirements. Economic modeling approaches were implemented to estimate sectoral demand and supply between 2011 and 2050. Residential, tourism and domestic demand were analysed for the A2, B2 and BAU scenarios as illustrated. The results suggest that water supply will exceed forecasted water demand under B2 and BAU during all four decades. However under the A2 scenario, water demand will exceed water supply by the year 2025. It is important to note that the model has been constrained by the omission of several key parameters, and time series for climate indicators, data for which are unavailable. Some of these include time series for discharge data, rainfall-runoff data, groundwater recharge rates, and evapotranspiration. Further, the findings which seem to indicate adequacy of water are also masked by seasonality in a given year, variation from year to year, and spatial variation within the nation state. It is imperative that some emphasis be placed on data generation in order to better project for the management of Grenada‘s water security. This analysis indicates the need for additional water catchment, storage and distribution infrastructure, as well as institutional strengthening, in order to meet the future needs of the Grenadian population. Strategic priorities should be adopted to increase water production, increase efficiency, strengthen the institutional framework, and decrease wastage. Grenada has embarked on several initiatives that can be considered strategies toward adaptation to the variabilities associated with climate change. The Government should ensure that these programs be carried out to the optimal levels for reasons described above. The ―no-regrets approach‖ which intimates that measures will be beneficial with or without climate change should be adopted. A study on the Costs of Inaction for the Caribbean in the face of climate change listed Grenada among the countries which would experience significant impacts on GDP between now and 2100 without adaptation interventions. Investment in the water sector is germane to building Grenada‘s capacity to cope with the multivariate impact of changes in the parameters of climate. .--I. Introduction.--II. Literature Review.-- III. Analysis of Climate for Guidance to the Water Sector.--IV. Socioeconomic setting, vulnerabilities and threats.--V. Climate Modelling and Water Supply 2011-2050.-- VI. Adaptation strategies.--VII. Cost Benefit Considerations.-- VIII. Conclusion. 2015-07-13T14:32:15Z 2015-07-13T14:32:15Z 2011-10-22 Texto Documento Completo http://hdl.handle.net/11362/38580 LC/CAR/L.329 en .pdf application/pdf GRANADA GRENADA ECLAC, Subregional Headquarters for the Caribbean