Abstract:
Among many challenges, climate change is one of the world's most pressing issues today.
Changing climate may have a major effect on water availability. It would have an adverse
effect on food productivity, socio-economic processes, and environmental sustainability.
These effects can put their main influence, especially over developing countries whose
economies rely heavily on agricultural production. By considering those occurring issues,
this study intended to assess the impact of climate change on the streamflow of the Ribb
Watershed. Hydrological data have taken from 1990-2017, and meteorological data
(Rainfall and Temperature) was from 1990-2019. Spatial data used were Soil, Land use, and
digital elevation model of the Ribb watershed. The performance of three regional climate
models (KNMI-RACMO22T, SMHI-RCA4, and CLMcom-CCLM4-8-17) from GCM MOHC HadGEM2-ES with their ENSEMBLE model checked and by comparing their performance,
KNMI-RACMO22T was the one which performing best and selected for further simulation
and impact assessment. Rainfall and Temperature data of KNMI-RACMO22T RCM for
RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 were bias-corrected by power transformation and linear transformation
techniques respectively. Trend analysis was analyzed for two-time horizons, near-term from
2025-2054 and long-term 2055-2084 by using Mann-Kendal trend test. The result shows that
in the future, for both near-term and long-term, mean month rainfall is increased on
December to April and decreasing from May-September. Summer and autumn show rainfall
decrease while spring and winter are increasing on both RCP4.5 and RCP8.5. Annual
rainfall shows decreasing trend on both RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 for near and long term. Near
and long term, mean month maximum and minimum temperature show mostly an increasing
trend on both scenarios. Annual temperature tends increasing on both scenarios in near and
long term. HEC-HMS version 4.7.1 calibration (1990-2010) and validation (2011-2017)
result of the model shows satisfactory agreement between observed and simulated
streamflow in which coefficient of determination (R2) and Nash-Sutcliffe Efficiency (NSE)
was 0.89 and 0.86 for calibration and 0.87 and 0.84 for validation respectively. The near term RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 show the highest decrease in streamflow in August (-46.52m3
/s and
-49.43m3/s), respectively. Long-term streamflow also shows the highest decrease in August (-
42.85m3/s and -43.86m3/s), respectively. On seasonal time-step, summer shows a decrease in
streamflow; the winter season tends to increase on both RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 over near-term
and long-term time horizons. Annually the stream flows appear decreased on RCP4.5 and
RCP8.5 in near-term and long-term time horizons. Flow Duration curve used to examine the
mean monthly extreme flows, and the result was increasing in low flow and decreasing in
high flow. Future streamflow of the Ribb watershed have decreased compared to the base
period. This will occur because of decrease in rainfall and increase in temperature.
Therefore, there should be proper water resource planning and management in the area for
the better operation and usage of stream water of the Ribb watershed