Institute for Atmospheric and Climate Science, ETH Zurich, Universitaetsstrasse 16, 8092, Zurich, Switzerland.
Department of Hydrology and Hydraulic Engineering, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Pleinlaan 2, 1050, Brussels, Belgium.
Nat Commun. 2020 Jan 15;11(1):290. doi: 10.1038/s41467-019-14075-4.
Irrigation affects climate conditions - and especially hot extremes - in various regions across the globe. Yet how these climatic effects compare to other anthropogenic forcings is largely unknown. Here we provide observational and model evidence that expanding irrigation has dampened historical anthropogenic warming during hot days, with particularly strong effects over South Asia. We show that irrigation expansion can explain the negative correlation between global observed changes in daytime summer temperatures and present-day irrigation extent. While global warming increases the likelihood of hot extremes almost globally, irrigation can regionally cancel or even reverse the effects of all other forcings combined. Around one billion people (0.79-1.29) currently benefit from this dampened increase in hot extremes because irrigation massively expanded throughout the 20[Formula: see text] century. Our results therefore highlight that irrigation substantially reduced human exposure to warming of hot extremes but question whether this benefit will continue towards the future.
灌溉会影响到全球各个地区的气候条件——尤其是极端高温情况。然而,这些气候影响与其他人为因素的影响相比如何,在很大程度上尚不清楚。在这里,我们提供了观测和模型证据,表明灌溉的扩张在炎热天气期间减弱了历史上人为造成的变暖,而在南亚地区的影响尤为强烈。我们表明,灌溉的扩张可以解释全球观测到的夏季白天温度变化与当前灌溉面积之间的负相关关系。虽然全球变暖几乎在全球范围内增加了发生极端高温的可能性,但灌溉可以在局部地区抵消甚至逆转所有其他因素的综合影响。由于在 20 世纪[Formula: see text]整个世纪,灌溉大规模扩张,目前约有 10 亿人(0.79-1.29)受益于这种极端高温增加的减弱。因此,我们的研究结果表明,灌溉大大减少了人类对极端高温变暖的暴露,但也提出了这种好处是否会持续到未来的问题。