Attribution and Risk Projections of Hydrological Drought Over Water‐Scarce Central Asia

Abstract Central Asia (CA), a typical arid and semiarid region, has experienced worsening droughts, adversely impacting agricultural production and socioeconomic development. However, the evolution of hydrological droughts in CA remains unclear. Here, we used instrumental streamflow and reanalysis t...

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Main Authors: Xinfeng Wu, Wenhui Tang, Feng Chen, Shijie Wang, Zulfiyor Bakhtiyorov, Yuxin Liu, Yansong Guan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-01-01
Series:Earth's Future
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1029/2024EF005243
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author Xinfeng Wu
Wenhui Tang
Feng Chen
Shijie Wang
Zulfiyor Bakhtiyorov
Yuxin Liu
Yansong Guan
author_facet Xinfeng Wu
Wenhui Tang
Feng Chen
Shijie Wang
Zulfiyor Bakhtiyorov
Yuxin Liu
Yansong Guan
author_sort Xinfeng Wu
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Central Asia (CA), a typical arid and semiarid region, has experienced worsening droughts, adversely impacting agricultural production and socioeconomic development. However, the evolution of hydrological droughts in CA remains unclear. Here, we used instrumental streamflow and reanalysis to demonstrate a decline in surface runoff in CA since the 1990s, with 44.6% and 33.2% of the area dominated by reductions in snowmelt and precipitation, respectively. We found that global warming contributes to the long‐term decrease in surface runoff, while short‐term fluctuations in surface runoff are caused by the El Niño‐Southern Oscillation, such as southern CA drying induced by decreasing precipitation during La Niña. We project the future hydrological drought characteristics based on state‐of‐the‐art global hydrological simulations and found increasing duration and severity of hydrological droughts in CA, especially in the Amu Darya basin, and the Caspian Sea East Coast basin. These increasing droughts are exacerbated by higher anthropogenic emissions, posing high‐level risks to 39.01% of land area and 35.9% of human population under an extremely high emissions scenario. These findings highlight the need for improved water conservation technologies and concerted development strategies should be considered by national policy makers in this water‐scarce and climatically sensitive region.
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spelling doaj-art-4a64b2357df24c29be50702d61ba6d562025-01-28T15:40:38ZengWileyEarth's Future2328-42772025-01-01131n/an/a10.1029/2024EF005243Attribution and Risk Projections of Hydrological Drought Over Water‐Scarce Central AsiaXinfeng Wu0Wenhui Tang1Feng Chen2Shijie Wang3Zulfiyor Bakhtiyorov4Yuxin Liu5Yansong Guan6Yunnan Key Laboratory of International Rivers and Transboundary Eco‐Security Institute of International Rivers and Eco‐Security Yunnan University Kunming ChinaYunnan Key Laboratory of International Rivers and Transboundary Eco‐Security Institute of International Rivers and Eco‐Security Yunnan University Kunming ChinaYunnan Key Laboratory of International Rivers and Transboundary Eco‐Security Institute of International Rivers and Eco‐Security Yunnan University Kunming ChinaYunnan Key Laboratory of International Rivers and Transboundary Eco‐Security Institute of International Rivers and Eco‐Security Yunnan University Kunming ChinaYunnan Key Laboratory of International Rivers and Transboundary Eco‐Security Institute of International Rivers and Eco‐Security Yunnan University Kunming ChinaYunnan Key Laboratory of International Rivers and Transboundary Eco‐Security Institute of International Rivers and Eco‐Security Yunnan University Kunming ChinaSchool of Computer Science China University of Geosciences Wuhan ChinaAbstract Central Asia (CA), a typical arid and semiarid region, has experienced worsening droughts, adversely impacting agricultural production and socioeconomic development. However, the evolution of hydrological droughts in CA remains unclear. Here, we used instrumental streamflow and reanalysis to demonstrate a decline in surface runoff in CA since the 1990s, with 44.6% and 33.2% of the area dominated by reductions in snowmelt and precipitation, respectively. We found that global warming contributes to the long‐term decrease in surface runoff, while short‐term fluctuations in surface runoff are caused by the El Niño‐Southern Oscillation, such as southern CA drying induced by decreasing precipitation during La Niña. We project the future hydrological drought characteristics based on state‐of‐the‐art global hydrological simulations and found increasing duration and severity of hydrological droughts in CA, especially in the Amu Darya basin, and the Caspian Sea East Coast basin. These increasing droughts are exacerbated by higher anthropogenic emissions, posing high‐level risks to 39.01% of land area and 35.9% of human population under an extremely high emissions scenario. These findings highlight the need for improved water conservation technologies and concerted development strategies should be considered by national policy makers in this water‐scarce and climatically sensitive region.https://doi.org/10.1029/2024EF005243
spellingShingle Xinfeng Wu
Wenhui Tang
Feng Chen
Shijie Wang
Zulfiyor Bakhtiyorov
Yuxin Liu
Yansong Guan
Attribution and Risk Projections of Hydrological Drought Over Water‐Scarce Central Asia
Earth's Future
title Attribution and Risk Projections of Hydrological Drought Over Water‐Scarce Central Asia
title_full Attribution and Risk Projections of Hydrological Drought Over Water‐Scarce Central Asia
title_fullStr Attribution and Risk Projections of Hydrological Drought Over Water‐Scarce Central Asia
title_full_unstemmed Attribution and Risk Projections of Hydrological Drought Over Water‐Scarce Central Asia
title_short Attribution and Risk Projections of Hydrological Drought Over Water‐Scarce Central Asia
title_sort attribution and risk projections of hydrological drought over water scarce central asia
url https://doi.org/10.1029/2024EF005243
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