Iradukunda Parfait, Mwanaumo Erastus M, Kabika Joel
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, School of Engineering, University of Zambia, PO. Box 32379 Lusaka, Zambia.
Department of Civil Engineering, College of Science, Engineering, and Technology, University of South Africa, PO. Box 392, Pretoria, South Africa.
Heliyon. 2024 Feb 24;10(5):e27126. doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e27126. eCollection 2024 Mar 15.
The current global climate has shown a significant change, mostly resulting from human-induced activities. Frequent experiences of extreme rainstorms, deadly landslides, and floods followed by the destruction of roads, bridges, drainage, buildings, agriculture, and other infrastructures have been appearing across the globe along with extensive socio-economic effects including human lives losses whereby tropical Africa is among the greatly affected regions. Several studies in the region acclaim the increase of climate-related extremes due to a gradual climate variation. Hence, this study aimed to evaluate how existing water structures might respond to the future climate, which is getting more severe and frequent in the region. The study was conducted on the Nyabugogo River catchment (NRC), covering a huge part of the Kigali metropolitan area. It was carried out through a downscaled global climate model (CMIP6 GCM) projection coupled with a joint SWAT + hydrological model and HEC-RAS hydrodynamic simulation. The study showed that the annual precipitation in Kigali might keep increasing, resulting in increased risks of extreme weather events. The study identified up to 38% (+514.9 mm) annual precipitation increment, which resulted in more than a doubled flow rate (+28.0 ) increment by the end of the century under a high greenhouse gas emission scenario (ssp585). As a result, hydrodynamic simulations revealed that the Bridge-1 in NRC might fail to accommodate the 50-year return peak storm under ssp585. Henceforth, there is a need to adopt high GHG emission scenarios in critical infrastructure development. Further, enforcing green-grey infrastructures in flood risk-low resilient areas is recommended to improve climate resilience. Thus, the results of this study might prove useful in climate-resilient infrastructure development and other pre-emptive adaptation practices, most importantly building anticipated resilience against climate-related hazards.
当前全球气候已出现显著变化,主要是由人类活动引起的。极端暴雨、致命山体滑坡和洪水频繁发生,随之而来的是道路、桥梁、排水系统、建筑物、农业和其他基础设施遭到破坏,全球各地都出现了这些情况,同时还产生了广泛的社会经济影响,包括人员伤亡,热带非洲是受影响最严重的地区之一。该地区的多项研究称赞,由于气候逐渐变化,与气候相关的极端情况有所增加。因此,本研究旨在评估现有水利设施对该地区未来愈发严峻和频繁的气候可能会作何反应。这项研究是在尼亚布戈戈河流域(NRC)进行的,该流域覆盖了基加利大都市区的很大一部分。研究通过降尺度全球气候模型(CMIP6全球气候模式)预测,结合SWAT+水文模型和HEC-RAS水动力模拟进行。研究表明,基加利的年降水量可能会持续增加,导致极端天气事件的风险增加。研究确定,在高温室气体排放情景(ssp585)下,到本世纪末,年降水量将增加高达38%(+514.9毫米),流量增加一倍多(+28.0)。结果,水动力模拟显示,在ssp585情景下,NRC的1号桥可能无法承受50年一遇的峰值风暴。因此,在关键基础设施建设中需要采用高温室气体排放情景。此外,建议在洪水风险低弹性地区加强绿色-灰色基础设施建设,以提高气候适应能力。因此,本研究结果可能对气候适应型基础设施建设和其他预防性适应措施有用,最重要的是建立对气候相关灾害的预期适应能力。