Examining the impact of emissions scenario on lower Mississippi River flood hazard projections

Author:

Dunne K B JORCID,Dee S GORCID,Reinders J,Muñoz S E,Nittrouer J A

Abstract

Abstract The Mississippi River is the largest commercial waterway in North America and one of the most heavily engineered rivers in the world. Future alteration of the river’s hydrology by climate change may increase the vulnerability of flood mitigation and navigation infrastructure implemented to constrain 20th century discharge conditions. Here, we evaluate changes in Lower Mississippi River basin hydroclimate and discharge from 1920–2100 C.E. by integrating river gauge observations and climate model ensemble simulations from CESM1.2 under multiple greenhouse gas emissions scenarios. We show that the Lower Mississippi River’s flood regime is highly sensitive to emissions scenario; specifically, the return period of flood discharge exceeding existing flood mitigation infrastructure decreases from approximately 1000 years to 31 years by the year 2100 under RCP8.5 forcing, primarily driven by increasing precipitation and runoff within the basin. Without aggressive reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, flood mitigation infrastructure may require substantial retrofitting to avoid disruptions to industries and communities along the Lower Mississippi River.

Funder

Division of Earth Sciences

National Science Foundation Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences

Publisher

IOP Publishing

Subject

Atmospheric Science,Earth-Surface Processes,Geology,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous),General Environmental Science,Food Science

Reference71 articles.

1. Global drivers of future river flood risk;Winsemius;Nat. Clim. Change,2016

2. Global flood risk under climate change;Hirabayashi;Nat. Clim. Change,2013

3. The response of the Lower Mississippi River to river engineering;Smith;Eng. Geol.,1996

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