Climate change effect on groundwater resources in South East Europe during 21st century

Groundwater is a precious resource that depends directly by the climate regime. The South East Europe region presents high sensitive climatic parameters due to climate change. Different approaches could be applied to assess the climate change impact on the water resources. Climate models and land co...

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Main Author: Nistor, Mărgărit-Mircea
Other Authors: School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/140716
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1407162020-06-01T09:05:01Z Climate change effect on groundwater resources in South East Europe during 21st century Nistor, Mărgărit-Mircea School of Civil and Environmental Engineering Engineering::Civil engineering Groundwater Resources Climate Change Groundwater is a precious resource that depends directly by the climate regime. The South East Europe region presents high sensitive climatic parameters due to climate change. Different approaches could be applied to assess the climate change impact on the water resources. Climate models and land cover data were used here in two shift times, present (2011–2040) and future (2041–2070), to evaluate the climate effect on groundwater resources. ’New Implemented Spatial-Temporal On Regions–Climate Effect on Groundwater’ (NISTOR-CEGW) method was proposed for this study because it implies an analysis at spatial scale based on land cover, actual crop evapotranspiration (AETc), effective precipitation, and De Martonne Aridity Index. This method uses an inference matrix to combine the effective precipitation and De Martonne Aridity Index to assess the impact of climate on groundwater giving six classes of effects, from very low to extremely high. For the present period, the findings indicate extremely high climate effect in the Pannonian basin, in the East and South of Romania, in the North and South of Bulgaria, in the East and central parts of Macedonia, in the North and East of Greece and in the European part of Turkey. In the future, the areas with the extremely high climate effect on groundwater increase mainly in the northern, eastern, and southeastern sides of the South East Europe region. The Dinarics and the Alps Mountains are the areas with low and very low effect of climate on groundwater. These areas experience a very humid and extremely humid climate. The findings show that about half territory of the South East Europe is facing with drought and the environment, groundwater, and related ecosystems are triggered by climate change. 2020-06-01T09:05:01Z 2020-06-01T09:05:01Z 2018 Journal Article Nistor, M.-M. (2019). Climate change effect on groundwater resources in South East Europe during 21st century. Quaternary International, 504, 171-180. doi:10.1016/j.quaint.2018.05.019 1040-6182 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/140716 10.1016/j.quaint.2018.05.019 2-s2.0-85047210255 504 171 180 en Quaternary International © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Civil engineering
Groundwater Resources
Climate Change
spellingShingle Engineering::Civil engineering
Groundwater Resources
Climate Change
Nistor, Mărgărit-Mircea
Climate change effect on groundwater resources in South East Europe during 21st century
description Groundwater is a precious resource that depends directly by the climate regime. The South East Europe region presents high sensitive climatic parameters due to climate change. Different approaches could be applied to assess the climate change impact on the water resources. Climate models and land cover data were used here in two shift times, present (2011–2040) and future (2041–2070), to evaluate the climate effect on groundwater resources. ’New Implemented Spatial-Temporal On Regions–Climate Effect on Groundwater’ (NISTOR-CEGW) method was proposed for this study because it implies an analysis at spatial scale based on land cover, actual crop evapotranspiration (AETc), effective precipitation, and De Martonne Aridity Index. This method uses an inference matrix to combine the effective precipitation and De Martonne Aridity Index to assess the impact of climate on groundwater giving six classes of effects, from very low to extremely high. For the present period, the findings indicate extremely high climate effect in the Pannonian basin, in the East and South of Romania, in the North and South of Bulgaria, in the East and central parts of Macedonia, in the North and East of Greece and in the European part of Turkey. In the future, the areas with the extremely high climate effect on groundwater increase mainly in the northern, eastern, and southeastern sides of the South East Europe region. The Dinarics and the Alps Mountains are the areas with low and very low effect of climate on groundwater. These areas experience a very humid and extremely humid climate. The findings show that about half territory of the South East Europe is facing with drought and the environment, groundwater, and related ecosystems are triggered by climate change.
author2 School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
author_facet School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Nistor, Mărgărit-Mircea
format Article
author Nistor, Mărgărit-Mircea
author_sort Nistor, Mărgărit-Mircea
title Climate change effect on groundwater resources in South East Europe during 21st century
title_short Climate change effect on groundwater resources in South East Europe during 21st century
title_full Climate change effect on groundwater resources in South East Europe during 21st century
title_fullStr Climate change effect on groundwater resources in South East Europe during 21st century
title_full_unstemmed Climate change effect on groundwater resources in South East Europe during 21st century
title_sort climate change effect on groundwater resources in south east europe during 21st century
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/140716
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