Climate Assessment for the Southwest  

Home | About CLIMAS | People | Forecasts | Research & Products | Learn About SW Climate | Publications | Calendar | Links

In this Section:

 

Note: Files marked pdf require Acrobat Reader, which can be downloaded from the Adobe website.

To order a hardcopy of this publication, please contact:

climas@email.arizona.edu


 


Publications
:
Assessing the Sensitivity of the Southwest's Urban Water Sector to Climate Variability: Case Studies in Arizona

CLIMAS Report Series, CL1-00
March 2000

Rebecca H. Carter, Petra Tschakert, and Barbara J. Morehouse

Download PDF File (CL1-00.pdf, 855K)

Abstract

The analysis presented in this working paper provides some parameters for thinking about the extent to which droughts of historically high magnitudes might affect water resource budgets in urban areas of Arizona. The analysis also reveals the high degree to which sensitivity to drought varies among the study sites. This variance among the study sites is largely due to local factors such as existing water use patterns, historical rainfall patterns, level of population growth expected, anticipated changes in water use among sectors over the next 25 years, and responsiveness of local water supplies to climatic conditions. Results indicate that the Santa Cruz AMA highly vulnerable even to short-term climatic variability. By contrast, the strongest impacts on the Tucson and Phoenix AMAs, and on the Sierra Vista subwatershed, are more apt to be experienced under longer-term conditions of deep drought. Sensitivity in the Benson subwatershed is the most sector-specific, with significant climatic impacts likely to occur in its agricultural sector.

Although agriculture is a highly visible user of water resources, results of this analysis indicates the elimination of agriculture under conditions of deep drought cannot be expected tango fully counter imbalances between supply and demand. In most cases, stringent conservation measures would also be required. Sustained severe drought conditions could generate particularly acute dissent among competing water users in areas where valued riparian areas exist—notably the San Pedro National Conservation Area and the Santa Cruz River riparian area downstream from the Nogales International Wastewater Treatment Plant.

Table of Contents

Executive Summary
I. Introduction
II. Literature Review
III. Methodology
IV. Analysis

A. Changes in Supply
B. Changes in Demand
C. Changes in Groundwater Balance

V. Implications
VI. Summary & Recommendations
References


Appendix 1: Phoenix AMA

Appendix 2: Tucson AMA
Appendix 3: Santa Cruz AMA
Appendix 4: Benson Subwatershed
Appendix 5: Sierra Vista Subwatershed

 

© 2002 Arizona Board of Regents. CLIMAS is part of the Institute for the Study of Planet Earth at the University of Arizona.
Send comments or questions to climas@email.arizona.edu