Hmm. Since all weather and hence climate on a longer scale is essentially chaotic, isn’t rainfall generally erratic as a consequence of that chaos?. Isn’t that why we have some areas that get droughts in one season and floods the next? Of course there are overriding patterns like El Niño, but it seems to me that this story is simply hyping the obvious known for years: better water storage helps in dry years.

Image above from NASA Earth Observeratory: Global Rainfall Patterns
From a press release, one more thing to worry about. The “big dam dilemma” is actually in the press release, I kid you not, see it unedited below. – Anthony
In a changing climate, erratic rainfall poses growing threat to rural poor, new report says.
Addressing big dam dilemma, experts call for diverse water storage options to reduce uncertainty and improve production of rainfed farming
STOCKHOLM (6 September 2010)—Against a backdrop of extreme weather wreaking havoc around the world, a new report warns that increasingly erratic rainfall related to climate change will pose a major threat to food security and economic growth, especially in Africa and Asia, requiring increased investment in diverse forms of water storage as an effective remedy.
“Millions of farmers in communities dependent on rainfed agriculture are at risk from decreasing and erratic availability of water,” said Colin Chartres, director general of the Sri Lanka-based International Water Management Institute (IWMI), which released the report to coincide with World Water Week in Stockholm. “Climate change will hit these people hard, so we have to invest heavily and quickly in adaptation.”
The report argues against over-reliance on single solutions like big dams, proposing instead an integrated approach that combines large- and small-scale storage options, including the use of water from natural wetlands, water stored in the soil, groundwater beneath the earth’s surface, and water collected in ponds, tanks and reservoirs.
“Just as modern consumers diversify their financial holdings to reduce risk, smallholder farmers need a wide array of ‘water accounts’ to provide a buffer against climate change impacts,” said Matthew McCartney, the report’s lead author and a hydrologist at IWMI, which is supported by the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR). “That way, if one water source goes dry, they’ll have others to fall back on.”
“For millions of people dependent on rainfed agriculture, reliable access to water can make all the difference between chronic hunger and steady progress toward food security,” McCartney added. “Even small amounts of stored water, by enabling crops and livestock to survive dry periods, can produce large gains in agricultural productivity and in the well-being of rural people.”
IWMI and its research partners estimate that up to 499 million people in Africa and India can benefit from improved agricultural water management.
In Asia, where irrigation was greatly expanded in recent decades, rainfed agriculture is still extensive, accounting for 66 percent of the total cropped area, the IWMI study notes. In sub-Saharan Africa, the proportion is far greater at 94 percent. Yet, these are precisely the regions where water storage infrastructure is least developed.
“Unless we can reduce crippling uncertainty in rainfed agriculture through better water storage, many farmers in developing countries will face a losing battle with a more hostile and unpredictable climate.”
In response to increased demand for food and power supplies, the governments of developing countries with fast-growing economies have invested heavily in large dams during the current decade, ending a 10-year lull in their construction. Many of the 50,000 large dams built worldwide since the 1950s are intended to store water for irrigation.
The positive effects of such infrastructure development, in terms of flood control and improved agricultural productivity are well documented, the IWMI report explains. But so are the adverse social and environmental impacts, including displacement of up to 80 million people from their homes and disruption of the livelihoods of some 470 million people living downstream from dams as a result of altered river flows. As acrimonious debate about large dams continues, IWMI’s advice for governments is to do a better job of analyzing the potential benefits for economic development and poverty reduction and to pay more serious attention to the social and environmental consequences.
But the IWMI study also advocates giving more weight to a continuum of small-scale storage options, citing strong evidence that when such measures are well planned, they can contribute importantly to local food security and economic growth.
Field studies in various semi-arid environments, for example, have proven the effectiveness of using small planting basins to “harvest” water, together with targeted application of organic or inorganic fertilizer. In Zimbabwe, such basins have been shown to boost maize yields, whether rainfall is abundant or scarce, while in Niger, they have permitted three- or four-fold increases in millet yields.
In the northeast of India’s Rajasthan State, the construction of about 10,000 water harvesting structures—intended mainly to recharge groundwater—has made it possible to irrigate about 14,000 hectares, benefiting some 70,000 people. Whereas previously, farmers barely had enough water to produce grains, now they can also grow vegetables and other cash crops. Similarly, the construction of more than 90,000 underground water storage tanks in China is benefiting a million farmers.
Case studies suggest that combinations of different storage options can be particularly effective. In southern Sri Lanka, for example, the construction of a large water storage reservoir, which was then linked to five previously created small reservoirs brought about a 400 percent increase in crop production.
But in some places, the results of major water storage initiatives have been uneven. In Ethiopia, for example, one study showed that groundwater wells and small dams reduced poverty by 25 to 50 percent. But another analysis in the country’s Amhara region found that most of the approximately 4,000 water harvesting ponds constructed from 2003 to 2008 were no longer functioning, mainly because of poor site selection, technical failures and weak community involvement in maintenance.
“None of these options is a panacea,” said McCartney. “They all have pros and cons, which depend on their inherent characteristics, on the way they are planned and managed, and on the conditions at specific sites.”
A further hazard with any water storage option, the IWMI report notes, is that the practice itself will be subject to climate change impacts. In arid regions, for example, soil moisture may decline so rapidly as to reduce the effectiveness of practices like planting basins. Likewise, decreased rainfall could limit groundwater recharge, while rising sea levels will increase the risk of salt water intruding on coastal aquifers.
Another danger is that badly planned storage will not only waste money but actually worsen the negative affects of climate change, for example, by providing extra breeding habitats for malaria-infected mosquitoes.
To guard against such hazards, the report argues, governments need to assume greater responsibility for more integrated planning of water storage systems. In the past, storage schemes were often conceived in a piecemeal fashion at the local level, based more on political expediency than on evidence. An integrated approach would take into account the wide range of hydrological, economic, social and environmental factors that determine costs and benefits and would consider various storage options in combination. Well-planned water storage can help lift people out of poverty and provide them with an effective way to cope with climate change.
“The more we study climate change, the more we realize that water is the principal medium by which its impacts will be manifested in agriculture,” said Chartres. “We may not know exactly what those impacts will be, but we can be sure they will include greater rainfall variability. Water storage in all its forms offers a better way to manage risks during these times of increasingly uncertain weather.
The International Water Management Institute (IWMI) is a nonprofit, scientific research organization focusing on the sustainable use of water and land resources in agriculture, to benefit poor people in developing countries. IWMI’s mission is “Improving the management of water and land resources for food, livelihoods and the environment.” IWMI has its headquarters in Sri Lanka and regional offices in Africa and Asia. The Institute works in partnership with developing countries, international and national research institutes, universities and other organizations to develop tools and technologies that contribute to poverty reduction as well as food and livelihood security. www.iwmi.org
The Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR), established in 1971, is a strategic partnership of countries, international and regional organizations and private foundations supporting the work of a consortium of 15 international Centers. In collaboration with national agricultural research systems, civil society and the private sector, the CGIAR fosters sustainable agricultural growth through high-quality science aimed at benefiting the poor through stronger food security, better human nutrition and health, higher incomes and improved management of natural resources. www.cgiar.org
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Erratic rainfall?????? They are stating the damned obvious.
Below is a selection of erratic reporting from the BBC regarding Africa and rain:
Africa could face more droughts [March 2006]
West Africa faces ‘megadroughts’ [April 2009]
Are the deserts getting greener? [July 2009]
UN issues desertification warning [June 2007]
The Greening of the Deserts [June 2009]
And just recently we have more erratic behaviour from the BBC:
Climate ‘is a major cause’ of conflict in Africa [Nov. 2009]
Climate shifts ‘not to blame’ for African civil wars [Sept. 2010]
Finally:
“Case studies suggest that combinations of different storage options can be particularly effective. In southern Sri Lanka, for example, the construction of a large water storage reservoir, which was then linked to five previously created small reservoirs brought about a 400 percent increase in crop production.”
“The more we study climate change, the more we realize that water is the principal medium by which its impacts will be manifested in agriculture,” said Chartres. “We may not know exactly what those impacts will be, but we can be sure they will include greater rainfall variability. Water storage in all its forms offers a better way to manage risks during these times of increasingly uncertain weather.”
Surprise, surprise, who would have thought that water was so important in areas of drought. Why didn’t anyone think of this before?
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On the subject of water wars below is what history has shown us about shared water resources promoting peace and treaties!!!!
http://www.utne.com/Politics/Water-War-Peace-Conflict-Negotiations-Hope.aspx
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7886646.stm
http://www.dundee.ac.uk/cepmlp/journal/html/vol3/article3-2.html
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v458/n7236/full/458282a.html
http://seedmagazine.com/content/article/the_truth_about_water_wars/
http://www.wilsoncenter.org/topics/pubs/NavigatingPeaceIssue1.pdf
http://www.slate.com/id/2215263/
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/sais_review/v022/22.2dinar.html
http://www.rips.or.jp/english/seminars/indias_policy.html
I live in Southern Australia. We have a seemingly perpetual cycle the goes like : drought, fire, flood.
When we recently had a long drought, it was caused by global warming. The recent disastrous bushfires, caused by global warming. We are waiting for the announcement of the cause of this weeks floods.
@enneagram
You quote
‘Another danger is that badly planned storage will not only waste money but actually worsen the negative affects of climate change
…..??????????????????????????????????’
There is nothing new here. This story has been told and retold over millenia.
There was a time, not so long ago in our forefathers time, when Man lived in an Earthly Paradise. But because of his Sin in doing (insert xxxxx where xxxxx represents whatever the storyteller is peeved about, burning fuel, sex, not praying enough, praying to the wrong gods, wearing a kilt….you name it some nutter will get excited about it), he has been banished from Paradise and must make restitution for his errors. And stop doing whatever xxxxx is this time around.
Today’s Climate Alarmists are little different from all the previous doomsday cults. In this particular case their chosen means of worship/ritual is by ‘Climate Science’, which bears a superficial resemblance to real science, but has none of the substance. The great Richard Feynman called stuff like ths Cargo Science, as being analagous to those who hope that by building a mock airfield on a Pacific Island, they can bring back the USAF and all the goodies (and Gods) that came with it.
And they will have just as much joy of it.
These people aren’t studying climate, they are preaching the religion!
http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/27370
So…let me get this right. They want to bottle up all of the fresh water and then wonder why a drought hits? Sounds like a good idea [/sarc]
>>Against a backdrop of extreme weather wreaking havoc
>>around the world
The weather is only ‘wreaking havoc around the world’ because we have tripled the world population inside one century.
According to Wiki, Pakistan has quintupled (x5) its population since 1950. So the recent ‘disaster’ of floods in Pakistan are actually due to the rampant, unsustainable and irresponsible population increase, not extreme weather. More people = more people effected by floods.
And its not just Pakistan. In Britain, thousands of homes, that had been built on flood-plains, were flooded and destroyed. And government officials moaned and groaned and cited climate change. Bo****ks to climate change as an excuse!
The clue to the real problem lies in the name of the land ….
And they are only building on flood-plains because Britain is now the most crowded nation in Europe.
A civilisation without population control is not only uncivilised, it is doomed to disaster and extinction.
.
The Great Population Dilemma? Nothing new here! Move on, move on people!
We really do need Warp Drive Intergalactic Transport, the sooner the better!
We’ve always had this problem of overpopulation and never, ever, had a good and effective solution.
The inventor of Warp Drive will go down as the Greatest Inventor in Human History!!!
“Another danger is that badly planned storage will not only waste money but actually worsen the negative affects of climate change”
Apparently these climate clowns can’t even tell when to use the word “affects” and when to use “effects”. If only they had a brain.
And since when are they concerned about wasting money?
“Robert of Ottawa says:
September 7, 2010 at 4:11 am
The report argues against overreliance on single solutions like big dams
They should try telling that to the Aussies, who have water supply problems because all recent damn schemes have been opposed by the enviromentalists.”
Funny, and I thought it was because the south-east of Australia had been having a 13 year drought with major rain anomalies in the catchment areas of the capital cities. The last time I checked the main dam supplying my home town was 3% full, up from 0.9% in March. But you’re right, the answer would be to build another dam because when you build dams they automatically fill with water – kind of like the way the rain follows the plough.
“…Against a backdrop of extreme weather wreaking havoc around the world, a new report warns that increasingly erratic rainfall related to climate change will pose a major threat to food security…”
Their use of the word “erratic” is simply a description of the weather does. Can someone here tell me if in the last 1,000 years we ever had a period of un-erratic rainfall globally? If you really want to see erratic rain / climate shifts see below:
——————
How is it that AGW appears to have produced so many smart scientists?
Isn’t it amazing how they figure out stuff?
All they need do is ponder out loud or write up some supposition, as if they discovered something, and it becomes scientific, plausible, published and then gets referenced as if it’s a really cool story.
It’s become and strange kind of nauseating funny.
Frank K
Next thing you know, he’ll be repeating the absurd notion that climate is a boundary value problem…
No risk 🙂
He doesn’t know that a thing such as boundary value problem exists .
This will prevent him at least talking nonsense in this particular issue .
“Since all weather and hence climate on a longer scale is essentially chaotic, isn’t rainfall generally erratic as a consequence of that chaos?. Isn’t that why we have some areas that get droughts in one season and floods the next?”
You guys really need to read Leroux “Dynamic Analysis of Weather and Climate” Springer 2010 2ed. and you’ll understand that weather and climate are not chaotic at all.
David Waggott says:
September 7, 2010 at 1:41 am
Did these guys never hear of the 1930s ‘dust bowl’?
_____________________________________________________
I agree, did these idiots forget about the DUST BOWL???? Short memories and heavily edited education seems to abound in so called “science” and “policy making” these days.
The Warmistra would have had a field day with the 1930’s weather:
The most visible evidence of how dry the 1930s became was the dust storm. Tons of topsoil were blown off barren fields and carried in storm clouds for hundreds of miles… The impact of the Dust Bowl was felt all over the U.S. During the same April as Black Sunday, 1935, one of FDR’s advisors, Hugh Hammond Bennett, was in Washington D.C. on his way to testify before Congress about the need for soil conservation legislation. A dust storm arrived in Washington all the way from the Great Plains. As a dusty gloom spread over the nation’s capital and blotted out the sun, Bennett explained, “This, gentlemen, is what I have been talking about.” http://www.livinghistoryfarm.org/farminginthe30s/water_02.html
I guess it has become standard practice for most organisations involved, even peripherally, in growing food and livestock to give a nod and a wink to posited negative aspcts of Climate Change to stay ‘on message’ and thus keep the grant moneys flowing in. Apaart from that, most of this report is quite sensible and undramatic, but by reading between the lines one gains a sense of the writers’ frustration with primitive agriculturalists who don’t understand the value of maintaining systems that capture and store rainwater. This sugests that educating such farmers is a priority that has been missed for whatever reasons. I know from my own youthful experience of working in the rural world that much of farming is unromantic, boring and physically unrelenting.
Like many former farm boys, I found the lure of the city lay not in the bright lights of the nightspots but in a physically less demanding, more stimulating and more ordered life.
OT – but according to an Italian scientist the BP oil spill has interrupted the “loop current” (gulf stream) and could plunge us into the next glaciation.
http://www.iceagenow.com/BP_oil_spill_driving_us_into_an_ice_age-I_do_not_buy_it.htm
Now what would the bill for that be?
Here’s what it states: We need to collect water but we don’t want the water to have secondary uses, so no power dams. Just water collectors. No need to make these uppity poor third-world nations independent of our good graces, gifts, and guidance.
Apparently ‘irregular’ rainfall causes corn to pop in the fields of Kentucky!
“”A Hardin County farmer says that some ears among his feed corn rows popped on the stalk in a phenomenon that agricultural experts say is associated with irregular rainfall and high heat.””
http://www.courierpress.com/news/2010/sep/02/hot-and-dry-kentucky-farmers-corn-pops-field/
It’s good to see robust debate in a climate blog. Someone like RW can take strong issue with Anthony Watts and RW’s comment doesn’t get moderated into oblivion.
I sometimes post at pro-AGW blogs. I believe I’m civil, though in disagreement, but my comments don’t survive moderation. It seems that this happens more than in years past.
I get the impression that AGW advocates realize that they can’t hold their own in open debate anymore.
“Unless we can reduce crippling uncertainty in rainfed agriculture through better water storage, many farmers in developing countries will face a losing battle with a more hostile and unpredictable climate.”
IOW, business as usual, for the last 6,000 years; at least if we delete references to Climate Change.
As usual, Michael Crichton said it best (I don’t have the original, so I’m paraphrasing):
Storms, floods, droughts, hurricanes – it’s not the end of the world, it is our world. I think it’s time we grew up and knew it.”
The first step to untangle the entire “Climate Change Scheme” and take the alarmists the wind out of their sails is to simply distance ourselves from the term Climate Change = Anthropogenic CO2 driven climate resulting in weather extremes as propagated by the UN IPCC.
Our current weather, how extreme it might be, is nothing unusual and falls well within the extremes of the natural climate variability experienced during the entire interglacial.
If we distance ourselves from the term “Climate Change” and replace it by “Natural Climate Variability” the warmists will lack their big hook to hang all their alarmist articles and reports to dry.
Just give it some thought.
Climate Change = Erratic Rainfall= ‘big dam dilemma’= decline in bee pollination
“Fears of a decline in bee pollination confirmed: may be due to climate change”
“TORONTO, ON – Widespread reports of a decline in the population of bees and other flower-visiting animals have aroused fear and speculation that pollination is also likely on the decline. A recent University of Toronto study provides the first long-term evidence of a downward trend in pollination, while also pointing to climate change as a possible contributor…”
http://www.brightsurf.com/news/headlines/58513/Fears_of_a_decline_in_bee_pollination_confirmed_may_be_due_to_climate_change.html
____________________
Everything is all stuck together like a big wad of chewing gum!