fbpx Climate and irrigation | Page 2 | Science in the net

Climate and irrigation

Primary tabs

Read time: 2 mins

The analysis of two climate scientists indicates that the intensive use of irrigation techniques can in some regions temporarily counteract the effects of global warming.

In their research, just published in the Journal of Geophysical Research, Michael Puma (Columbia University) and Benjamin Cook (NASA Goddard Institute) investigated the impact exerted on climate by changes introduced in the last century in irrigation techniques and their more widespread use. It is known in fact that a greater amount of water released into the atmosphere both by evaporation and transpiration of crops, may have an effective chilling effect on the environment countering the effects of global warming.

The analysis shows that, while this influence is small at the global level (about a tenth of a degree), the impact is proving far more significant at the regional level, reaching a levelequivalent to that exercised - obviously in the opposite direction - by greenhouse gas. The most important influence is recorded in the basin of the Indus River, where irrigation can reduce warming by even 3 °C.

In addition,the study suggests that irrigation affects climate also in other ways, such as causing an increase in the level of annual precipitation in regions that are downwind with respect to the most intensively irrigated regions. Finally, there is the suspicion - but more detailed studies are needed for confirmation - that the distribution of monsoon rains may also be affected.

Columbia University

Autori: 
Sezioni: 
Climatology

prossimo articolo

Karen Hallberg, on peace and science

Karen Hallberg

In a world marked by wars and global crises, the new Secretary General of Pugwash tells us about the challenges of disarmament and the value of scientific dialogue for peace (photo: Karen Hallberg, source Wikipedia).

Pugwash is the name of a Canadian fishing village and a commitment to peace. In July 1957, at the height of the Cold War, twenty-two scientists gathered here for the first Pugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs. The group was led by the mathematician and philosopher Bertrand Russell, who, two years earlier on 9 July 1955, presented the Russell and Einstein Manifesto in London's Caxton Hall. In this manifesto, the philosopher and physicist (who died in April but had signed it) called on the world to renounce war.