Climate Variability and Change—Hydrological Impacts (Proceedings of the Fifth FRIEND World
Conference held at Havana, Cuba, November 2006), IAHS Publ. 308, 2006, 382–388.
The impacts of climate change on water resources
in the Okavango basin
SONJA FOLWELL & FRANK FARQHUARSON
Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, Crowmarsh Gifford, Wallingford, Oxfordshire OX10 8BB, UK
ssf @ceh.ac.uk
Abstract The need for coherent river
basin management plans has become a driving force behind the use of models in understanding
how basin hydrology will be affected by change. Of particular interest is how
water availability will be affected by climate change and by growing demands
for a finite resource. The Okavango basin, located in sub-Saharan Africa is a
large, endorheic basin with the river terminating in the vast expanse of the
ecologically important Okavango delta. It is also a transboundary basin
transecting Angola, Namibia and terminating in Botswana. The end of the Angolan
civil war has brought stability and development to the region. With increasing
abstractions, due to human development, and possible reductions in available
water, due to changing rainfall and evaporation patterns, flows entering the
delta will be altered. Considering these possibilities a grid-based model has
been used to examine current and future water availability and flows entering
the delta system.
Key words water resources; climate change
impacts; Okavango basin