High‐Resolution, Integrated Hydrological Modeling of Climate Change Impacts on a Semi‐Arid Urban Watershed in Niamey, Niger
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Abstract: This study evaluates the impact of climate change on water resources in a large, semi‐arid
urban watershed located in the Niamey Republic of Niger, West Africa. The watershed was
modeled using the fully integrated surface–subsurface HydroGeoSphere model at a high spatial
resolution. Historical (1980–2005) and projected (2020–2050) climate scenarios, derived from the
outputs of three regional climate models (RCMs) under the regional climate projection (RCP) 4.5
scenario, were statistically downscaled using the multiscale quantile mapping bias correction
method. Results show that the bias correction method is optimum at daily and monthly scales, and
increased RCM resolution does not improve the performance of the model. The three RCMs
predicted increases of up to 1.6% in annual rainfall and of 1.58 °C for mean annual temperatures
between the historical and projected periods. The durations of the minimum environmental flow
(MEF) conditions, required to supply drinking and agricultural water, were found to be sensitive to
changes in runoff resulting from climate change. MEF occurrences and durations are likely to be
greater from 2020–2030, and then they will be reduced for the 2030–2050 statistical periods. All three
RCMs consistently project a rise in groundwater table of more than 10 m in topographically high
zones, where the groundwater table is deep, and an increase of 2 m in the shallow groundwater
table.
