Irrigated agriculture in South Asia depends on meltwater, monsoon rains and groundwater. Climate change alters the hydrology and causes shifts in the timing, composition and magnitude of these sources of water supply. Simultaneously, socio-economic growth increases water demand. Here we use a high-resolution cryosphere–hydrology–crop model forced with an ensemble of climate and socio-economic projections to assess how the sources of irrigation water supply may shift during the twenty-first century. We find increases in the importance of meltwater and groundwater for irrigated agriculture. An earlier melt peak increases meltwater withdrawal at the onset of the cropping season in May and June in the Indus, whereas increasing peak irrigation w...
Especially in the Himalayan headwaters of the main rivers in South Asia, shifts in runoff are expect...
Water storage in and release from snow packs and glaciers constitute an important component of the h...
Irrigated agriculture plays a vital role in the economy of Pakistan by contributing about 90% of foo...
Irrigated agriculture in South Asia depends on meltwater, monsoon rains and groundwater. Climate cha...
Densely populated floodplains downstream of Asia’s mountain ranges depend heavily on mountain water ...
Agriculture and the monsoon are inextricably linked in India. A large part of the steady rise in agr...
The Indus Basin has supported agricultural practices since the Harappan civilization (3000-1500 BC)....
Indian agriculture is the largest user of rainfall, surface and groundwater resources. Some of the l...
International audienceLocal groundwater levels in South India are falling alarmingly. In the semi-ar...
The Indus, Ganges, and Brahmaputra (IGB) river basins provide about 900 million people with water re...
The Indus, Ganges, and Brahmaputra (IGB) river basins provide about 900 million people with water re...
There is an emerging understanding toward the importance of land-atmosphere interactions in the mons...
Creation of a large irrigation potential has been the cornerstone of India’s agricultural growth and...
Especially in the Himalayan headwaters of the main rivers in South Asia, shifts in runoff are expect...
Water storage in and release from snow packs and glaciers constitute an important component of the h...
Irrigated agriculture plays a vital role in the economy of Pakistan by contributing about 90% of foo...
Irrigated agriculture in South Asia depends on meltwater, monsoon rains and groundwater. Climate cha...
Densely populated floodplains downstream of Asia’s mountain ranges depend heavily on mountain water ...
Agriculture and the monsoon are inextricably linked in India. A large part of the steady rise in agr...
The Indus Basin has supported agricultural practices since the Harappan civilization (3000-1500 BC)....
Indian agriculture is the largest user of rainfall, surface and groundwater resources. Some of the l...
International audienceLocal groundwater levels in South India are falling alarmingly. In the semi-ar...
The Indus, Ganges, and Brahmaputra (IGB) river basins provide about 900 million people with water re...
The Indus, Ganges, and Brahmaputra (IGB) river basins provide about 900 million people with water re...
There is an emerging understanding toward the importance of land-atmosphere interactions in the mons...
Creation of a large irrigation potential has been the cornerstone of India’s agricultural growth and...
Especially in the Himalayan headwaters of the main rivers in South Asia, shifts in runoff are expect...
Water storage in and release from snow packs and glaciers constitute an important component of the h...
Irrigated agriculture plays a vital role in the economy of Pakistan by contributing about 90% of foo...