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The African freshwater system: pressure-impact relationships, changes, and risks

Water is critical for human existence and all life as we know it. This project investigates how pressures of climate change and human land- and water-use developments combine to impact freshwater flow, availability, drought and flood variations and changes, aiming to identify significant and critical impacts of future change scenarios for societies and ecosystems around Africa.
The objectives are ambitious and go beyond the state of the art in innovatively advancing interdisciplinary water resource science that overcomes the commonly fragmented view of freshwater aspects and problems as just local, associated with specific disciplines or societal sectors. In this project, the freshwater system will be integrated, recognizing and accounting for its actual physical-hydrological and change-driver connections, to discover emergent largescale patterns of pressure-impact relationships and possible tipping points to severe/irreversible societal/ecosystem impacts for different parts of the African continent.

 

Fellows involved in this project

Fellow
Sweden
 
 

Related news

 

Related publications

Journal Article

Zhou, Kejing, Fanhua Kong, Haiwei Yin, Georgia Destouni, Michae E. Meadows, Erik Andersson, Liding Chen, Bin Chen, Zhenya Li and Jie Su. 2024. Urban flood risk management needs nature-based solutions: a coupled social-ecological system perspective. Npj Urban Sustainability, 4(1), 25. https://doi.org/10.1038/s42949-024-00162-z

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Is any information on this page incorrect or outdated? Please notify Ms. Nel-Mari Loock at [email protected].