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MARIUS

Scientists will be able to study events such as tropical storm Karl, which developed in the Atlantic in September 2016, using the OpenIFShome project. (Image: NASA Visible Earth, LANCE/EOSDIS Rapid Response team)

MARIUS

Managing the Risks, Impacts and Uncertainties of drought and water Scarcity (MaRIUS)

Droughts and water scarcity pose a significant risk to the environment, society and the economy. In 2012 the UK experienced the driest spring in over a century, following two dry winters. However the current scientific understanding of the complex drivers and impacts of droughts is inadequate.

The project “Managing the Risks, Impacts and Uncertainties of drought and water Scarcity” (MaRIUS) will introduce a risk-based approach to drought and water scarcity in order to inform management decisions and prepare households.

Photo of Lake Hume in drought by Tim J Keegan

The project is designed to capture the complexity of the water scarcity by using expertise across the social and natural sciences and with key stakeholder involvement.

MaRIUS will use scenario modelling and case studies across a number of scales, from household to national, in order to understand both the drought impacts at a local level right as well as the institutional decision making by governments and water companies. The modelling will enable testing of drought scenarios and a thorough representation of their impacts on water quality, agriculture, biodiversity and economic losses.

In addition to the modelling component, social science and stakeholder engagement are a key part of the project and will help us to understand the role of institutions, regulation and the markets in drought management.

Weather@home Contribution

The MaRIUS project will make use of the large ensemble of regional climate model runs available from our weather@home experiments. The focus of this work is to develop event sets of droughts and heat waves within the framework of probabilistic event attribution. This will involve creating drought event sets for both the 20th century and future conditions (2030s, 2080s), using an improved weather@home modelling set-up to allow for important feedbacks specifically relevant to droughts. This will in particular involve the inclusion of an improved land-surface scheme into both the global and regional model, and a higher-resolution regional model at 25km.

Project Researcher: