ResearchPod
ResearchPod
Cabot Conversations: Untangling the water system - surprising impacts of climate change
Cabot Institute for the Environment scientists, Dr Gemma Coxon and Dr Ross Woods, highlight some surprising facts about the water system and how nature based solutions to drought and floods may not serve the purpose we want, especially if implemented without sufficient prior research.
00:00:07 Cabot Institute
Welcome to Cabot conversations produced by the Cabot Institute for the Environment at the University of Bristol.
00:00:13 Cabot Institute
We are a diverse community of 600 experts united by a common cause protecting our environment and identifying ways of living better with our changing planet.
00:00:23 Cabot Institute
This podcast series brings together our experts and collaborators to discuss complex environmental challenges and solutions to climate change.
00:00:31 Cabot Institute
In this episode, Doctor Gemma Coxon and Doctor Ross Woods discuss untangling the water system, surprising impacts of climate change. You can find out more about the Cabot Institute for the environment at bristol.ac.uk/cabot.
00:00:51 Dr Gemma Coxon
Hello, my name is Gemma Coxon. I'm a lecturer in hydrology in the school of Geographical Sciences at the University of Bristol.
00:01:01 Dr Gemma Coxon
My research focuses on understanding and predicting change in hydro climatic extremes, so specifically droughts and floods little bit more on the drought side than on the flood side.
00:01:15 Dr Gemma Coxon
And and I build computer models essentially that.
00:01:20 Dr Gemma Coxon
Tell us what happens when a rainfall drops on the ground and how it kind of enters into our river flow River systems and and how that might change in the future.
00:01:32 Dr Gemma Coxon
How about you, Ross?
00:01:34 Dr Ross Woods
I work in the Department of Civil Engineering at the University of Bristol. In my work, I'm interested in lots of different aspects of the water cycle.
00:01:45 Dr Ross Woods
For the purposes of this chat, I'm mostly going to have my flooding hat on.
00:01:51 Dr Ross Woods
And.
00:01:52 Dr Ross Woods
But I'm also interested in all sorts of other things.
00:01:57 Dr Ross Woods
Different parts of the water cycle and differently in lots of different places.
00:02:02 Dr Gemma Coxon
Now I know we're here today to talk a little bit about impacts of climate change on the water system, and I know this features quite heavily in both of the work that we do. But maybe Ross, you can you can kind of start off by by outlining you know what what your thoughts are about the impacts of climate change on the water.
00:02:24 Dr Gemma Coxon
System and what might change in the future.
00:02:27 Dr Ross Woods
We differently anticipate significant increases in temperature, so we expect the atmosphere to get warmer.
00:02:35 Dr Ross Woods
That means quite a few different things for hydrology.
00:02:39 Dr Ross Woods
But one of the things that's important that it means is that the atmosphere.
00:02:44 Dr Ross Woods
Can hold more water and if the atmosphere because it's warmer.
00:02:49 Dr Ross Woods
And if the atmosphere can hold more water, that means that it can bring bigger rainstorms to places. And so we can get. We have now the potential with a warmer warming atmosphere for more intense rainfall. So one of the things that we'd anticipate.
00:03:06 Dr Ross Woods
Is that you get more intense rainfall and then the interesting thing to ask about that is.
00:03:12 Dr Ross Woods
What does that mean for floods?
00:03:14 Dr Ross Woods
And kind of the obvious answer is, well, heavy rainfalls cause big floods.
00:03:20 Dr Ross Woods
So if the rainfalls get bigger, then I guess the floods will.
00:03:23 Dr Ross Woods
Get bigger and.
00:03:26 Dr Ross Woods
That is what you might think. But sometimes nature has a way of coming up with surprises for us, and I think there is potentially one there because.
00:03:38 Dr Ross Woods
The way that floods get made is not always really straightforward, so sometimes it just rains really hard and it lands on your pavement or something like that.
00:03:49 Dr Ross Woods
And then the water runs across the pavement and into some drainage system. And if you put more rain on the pavement, you'll get more rain water in your drains. That's fair.
00:04:00 Dr Ross Woods
But sometimes floods get made because of a combination of how much it rained.
00:04:05 Dr Ross Woods
And.
00:04:07 Dr Ross Woods
What state the soil was in, how wet the soil was when it was raining. So if it was that, the heavier rainfalls that we got with climate change, if they came at a time of year when the soils were really dry.
00:04:22 Dr Ross Woods
Then maybe they wouldn't have much impact.
00:04:25 Dr Ross Woods
And maybe what would really matter would be how much the rainfalls increased at the time of year when the soils are really wet. So in the UK that.
00:04:35 Dr Ross Woods
Will be in the winter time.
00:04:37 Dr Ross Woods
So I think The thing is that.
00:04:41 Dr Ross Woods
Because hydrology does the land surface processes. When rain arrives on the ground because those do interesting and complicated things, then sometimes the impacts of climate change aren't quite what you'd expect.
00:04:55 Dr Gemma Coxon
Yeah, and often forgotten a little bit. We really regularly kind of focus on, you know, the climate change impacts and we think, right, changes in rainfall, changes in temperature.
00:05:08 Dr Gemma Coxon
And you know, that's kind of what's going on in the atmosphere. And often I think occasionally we sometimes miss that link between what's happening on the land surface and then those surprising elements of how those terrestrial water fluxes modify that climate signal to produce either a flood or a.
00:05:28 Dr Gemma Coxon
Or a drought.
00:05:30 Dr Gemma Coxon
A. A similar kind of example from the kind of drought realm.
00:05:36 Dr Gemma Coxon
Is that?
00:05:38 Dr Gemma Coxon
So for the UK.
00:05:41 Dr Gemma Coxon
The UK sort of future climate projections, so those are UK CP 18.
00:05:49 Dr Gemma Coxon
Because they were produced in 2018, they are projecting that we'll get wetter winters and drier summers now. Overall, if you kind of average that out across the year overall kind of looks like we might get a small, you know, mean increase in rainfall.
00:06:10 Dr Gemma Coxon
So you think great, great for droughts, right? We weren't.
00:06:13 Dr Ross Woods
We water in the rivers in the.
00:06:14 Dr Gemma Coxon
Summer exactly, but bit more water in the rivers.
00:06:17 Dr Gemma Coxon
In the summer.
00:06:18 Dr Gemma Coxon
But because of the ways that we require water and we need water for, you know, public water supplies, so the water that's coming out of your taps and for agriculture, you know, we need lots of that water in the summer and our water supply system isn't really set up to store a whole load of water.
00:06:41 Dr Gemma Coxon
That comes in the winter.
00:06:43 Dr Gemma Coxon
To then be able to supply through the summer. So although we might get a small mean increase in our rainfall can lead to some water shortages because of those really severe decreases in rainfall in the sun.
00:06:57 Dr Gemma Coxon
And so again, it's how that climate signal is being modified.
00:07:01 Dr Gemma Coxon
By the by the terrestrial water system.
00:07:06 Dr Gemma Coxon
That's really interesting.
00:07:08 Dr Ross Woods
OK. So just to make sure I understood you right, So what you're saying is that you're expecting?
00:07:14 Dr Ross Woods
Overall, the total amount of flow in the river to get a little bit bigger maybe.
00:07:20 Dr Ross Woods
But.
00:07:22 Dr Ross Woods
If you look inside a year.
00:07:25 Dr Ross Woods
There's that extra water is coming in the winter, and they'll actually be less available than currently in the summer.
00:07:33 Dr Gemma Coxon
Yeah, and off often it's it's the summer when we most need that water or irrigation. We're taking a lot more showers and baths because of the hot weather, you know, filling up paddling pools and watering the gardens.
00:07:51 Dr Gemma Coxon
And so to be able to meet that water demand we, you know, it's not just about the total amounts of rainfall, but it's about the timing of that rainfall too. And I think that that links with your with the floods example of kind of when that intense rainfall is coming when you know how you know conditions.
00:08:11 Dr Gemma Coxon
Before play, a real strong part in determining whether we get a flood or a drought, for example.
00:08:17 Dr Ross Woods
Yeah. So I guess you've talked a little bit about some of the consequences of those preventable consequences. Do you think or?
00:08:26 Dr Ross Woods
Once we can reduce.
00:08:27 Dr Gemma Coxon
Sir James Bevan, who's the chief executive of the Environment Agency, gave a really interesting talk. I think it was a year or two years ago now where he spoke about the the jaws of death now. Not not quite. You know, like a.
00:08:47 Dr Gemma Coxon
Dark straws, but essentially.
00:08:49 Dr Gemma Coxon
And.
00:08:52 Dr Gemma Coxon
The projections for the UK are that you know, because of anthropogenic climate change, we're gonna get changes in our water supply. So how much how much rainfall is occurring and also how much evaporation is occurring from increases in temperature.
00:09:09 Dr Gemma Coxon
Actually one of the big drivers of kind of future droughts is how much water water we are using as a as a society. We have a rapidly growing population in the UK.
00:09:25 Dr Gemma Coxon
There it, which is centered around some quite densely populated urban areas.
00:09:32 Dr Gemma Coxon
And it's not just thinking about changes in water supply, but also changes in water demand. And Sir James Bevan gave this example where he was highlighting the fact that, you know, if we have water supply decreasing and water demand increasing, you get this point where they cross and and that's called the jaws of death because we don't have enough.
00:09:53 Dr Gemma Coxon
Water to meet water supply to meet demand.
00:09:57 Dr Gemma Coxon
Now.
00:09:59 Dr Gemma Coxon
Is part of that speech, he said that, you know, many areas of the UK will are projected to face severe water shortages by 2050 unless we do something now in terms of what we can do now, I think one of the key things is.
00:10:18 Dr Gemma Coxon
But this is really an interdisciplinary problem.
00:10:22 Dr Gemma Coxon
You know you've got the water supply, which is kind of.
00:10:25 Dr Gemma Coxon
More of the physical science side, you know how rainfall and evaporation transform themselves into a change in river flow, but then you've got water demand, which is very much, you know, more in a social science kind of realm. It's looking at behaviours of water patterns and water usage. It's thinking about how we can.
00:10:45 Dr Gemma Coxon
Change behaviour so that you don't leave a tap running for example, whilst you're brushing your teeth.
00:10:51 Dr Gemma Coxon
So I think one of the key solutions is that and I think actually hydrology is getting better at this is that we we need to work as an interdisciplinary community to be able to address some of these challenges and thinking about you know.
00:11:11 Dr Gemma Coxon
How we can work with a broader team of people I think is going to be really important. The other thing I think.
00:11:22 Dr Gemma Coxon
That we can do to address this, we've got lots of wonderful hydrological models.
00:11:28
That.
00:11:28 Dr Gemma Coxon
Provide us with projects projections of how flows might change in the future. I think those models need to be better adapted to reflect some of these water demand issues.
00:11:42 Dr Gemma Coxon
So.
00:11:44 Dr Gemma Coxon
Thinking about so, currently our our models are very good at kind of.
00:11:50 Dr Gemma Coxon
You know, taking an estimate of rainfall and transforming it into a river flow. What they're not so great at is thinking about, well, if if a farmer is going to abstract a lot of water just upstream.
00:12:02 Dr Gemma Coxon
You know and and apply that water to to his land. How might that affect the stream flow or how might that affect a decision maker further downstream or the behaviour of someone else because there's not enough river flow in your river.
00:12:19 Dr Ross Woods
Right. So there's a whole lot of other parts of the water cycle.
00:12:25 Dr Ross Woods
Beyond.
00:12:27 Dr Ross Woods
But but, but our model is used to representing. So yeah, lots of those models.
00:12:33 Dr Ross Woods
We've used them to put water.
00:12:37 Dr Ross Woods
To figure out how much water is at the beginning of the land cycle in effect.
00:12:42 Dr Ross Woods
Where it's the inflows to reservoirs, although recharge to groundwater, but there's actually a whole lot of other stuff going on.
00:12:50 Dr Gemma Coxon
What about the solutions, do you think on the flood site? Where do you think, yeah.
00:12:55 Dr Ross Woods
There's a bunch of different places where.
00:12:59 Dr Ross Woods
Things are needed. Some of that is to do with cities.
00:13:03 Dr Ross Woods
So.
00:13:05 Dr Ross Woods
In where?
00:13:08 Dr Ross Woods
Well as as.
00:13:09 Dr Ross Woods
Cities are built at the moment. There's not. There's not so much opportunity for water to be affected by the soil conditions of whether things are dry or wet or not. There's a lot more of the paved areas and things like that where you can't really store any water. And in those places it's actually quite challenging problem. It's quite a big.
00:13:30 Dr Ross Woods
Infrastructure problem because the pipes that we use to carry that storm water around, it's quite tricky to make them.
00:13:39 Dr Ross Woods
Yeah.
00:13:40 Dr Ross Woods
So yeah, I think one of the big challenges for cities is finding more space to put water when it first arrives on the ground.
00:13:50 Dr Ross Woods
And for cities that are already really densely inhabited, that's a big challenge.
00:13:55 Dr Ross Woods
For new build subdivisions.
00:13:59 Dr Ross Woods
We've got the opportunity to plan ahead and reserve some land.
00:14:05 Dr Ross Woods
And say this is a place where we'd like to store water when it rains and have it drain away slowly afterwards so that there's not so much extra water turning up in our stormwater drains at the time.
00:14:22 Dr Ross Woods
But yeah for.
00:14:24 Dr Ross Woods
Densely built cities. It's a big challenge.
00:14:27 Dr Ross Woods
The other thing that comes with that is.
00:14:31 Dr Ross Woods
Where we have combined sewers where?
00:14:35 Dr Ross Woods
The trains are carrying.
00:14:38 Dr Ross Woods
Not just our storm water, but maybe.
00:14:43 Dr Ross Woods
There's been some sewage that's either being carried by a drain or that's leaked from a pipe into our storm water systems.
00:14:54 Dr Ross Woods
UM.
00:14:55 Dr Ross Woods
Dealing with that pollution, it's going to be quite a big issue for us as well. So and there again, we've got quite big challenges because lots of that infrastructure is 100 years old and it's highly underground in the countryside, it's a slightly different story.
00:15:12 Dr Gemma Coxon
I was gonna. I was just about to ask you. What do you think about?
00:15:16 Dr Gemma Coxon
You know, nature based solutions and and in particular natural flood management, because there's something I'm really interested in as well.
00:15:23 Dr Ross Woods
Natural flood management. It's the idea that.
00:15:28 Dr Ross Woods
In places where there's space, we might be able to hold back some of the water during the flood.
00:15:34 Dr Ross Woods
And there's lots of different ways of doing that. Examples of that.
00:15:40 Dr Ross Woods
Might be.
00:15:43 Dr Ross Woods
Putting lots of pieces of wood and tree branches in the stream to partially block the stream so that it slows it up a bit.
00:15:54 Dr Ross Woods
Another option is.
00:15:58 Dr Ross Woods
Making use of ditches as.
00:16:03 Dr Ross Woods
Places to store water during floods, so this is good because it means that not all the rain that falls now has to be discharged into the stream. Right now that we can slow it down, which is a good thing.
00:16:17 Dr Ross Woods
I think the challenge with those is to get our expectations right for which events those can deal with that. There's only so much water that you can hold back.
00:16:29 Dr Ross Woods
On by holding it in places in the landscape.
00:16:33 Dr Ross Woods
And there are limits to that. So when we get to the most severe floods.
00:16:39 Dr Ross Woods
Maybe the effect of those natural flood management techniques is not going to be so large that I think at the moment my understanding is they have their most value for medium sized floods.
00:16:52 Dr Ross Woods
Yeah you can.
00:16:54 Dr Ross Woods
Hold those back. Have the water drain off the land more slowly so.
00:17:00 Dr Ross Woods
For floods that are or for rainfall events that are currently pretty small but are going to get bigger.
00:17:07 Dr Ross Woods
And maybe turn from small ones into medium sized ones.
00:17:11 Dr Ross Woods
That water will not be able to hold back.
00:17:14 Dr Ross Woods
But for what's currently a big flood, that becomes even bigger if climate change means that atmosphere can hold more water and we get bigger rain storms.
00:17:24 Dr Ross Woods
There I think it's going to be challenged to hold those back.
00:17:28 Dr Ross Woods
I think.
00:17:30 Dr Ross Woods
The yeah, we've got to think about other things.
00:17:36 Dr Ross Woods
At least not rely entirely on natural flood management in the sense of holding water back as the solution, because there are limits to that.
00:17:47 Dr Gemma Coxon
Yeah, I think.
00:17:49 Dr Gemma Coxon
The combination of kind of measures is really interesting and when we're.
00:17:57 Dr Gemma Coxon
Thinking about adaptation measures and no, you know from a natural flood management side, there's been a really big drive recently, particularly in the UK to, you know, to quantify, to assess and estimate you know the the impact of these natural flood measures so that we can say.
00:18:17 Dr Gemma Coxon
You know well.
00:18:18 Dr Gemma Coxon
Actually, for these size droughts, yeah, droughts, floods.
00:18:22 Dr Gemma Coxon
But these size floods, they will have an impact. But you know, once you get to a really, really big event that you know we we need other measures in place.
00:18:32 Dr Ross Woods
Yeah. I think one of the really interesting features of those is connected to what you said about the.
00:18:40 Dr Ross Woods
This the more interdisciplinary side of our work that.
00:18:45 Dr Ross Woods
For these kind of nature based solutions to work, we really need to implement them in a lot of places because the floods that we see in really big rivers, those are made from the accumulation of water and lots and lots and lots of tiny little streams that all joined together. And those are all starting.
00:19:05 Dr Ross Woods
On the properties of individual land owners, landholders.
00:19:09 Dr Ross Woods
And for this kind of natural flood management to make a difference.
00:19:13 Dr Ross Woods
We need to do that when the stream is still really quite small.
00:19:18 Dr Ross Woods
Because once you've got a river that's five metres wide, you're not really going to be able to.
00:19:23 Dr Ross Woods
Put anything in there that's going to hold any water back unless it's a huge engineering structure basically. So if we want the nature based approach, we need to do it in small and in many, many places, which means talking to an awful lot of people because it's their land.
00:19:40 Dr Gemma Coxon
Yeah, and I think, UM, uh, the the government government sort of on quite a big drive at the moment to plant more trees.
00:19:50 Dr Gemma Coxon
Across the UK for various benefits, not not just for not just for water.
00:19:58 Dr Gemma Coxon
And finding space for that to happen and planting those trees critically in the right places so that they don't have unintended consequences on other aspects of the water cycle is really is really important.
00:20:15 Dr Ross Woods
Yeah, I I think that tree thing is a.
00:20:17 Dr Ross Woods
Really.
00:20:18 Dr Ross Woods
Multi dimensional idea. There's lots and lots and lots of interesting impacts.
00:20:25 Dr Ross Woods
So one of them that's good from a flooding point of view is that if.
00:20:31 Dr Ross Woods
If you plant trees, then more of the rain that lands in the place where the tree is.
00:20:38 Dr Ross Woods
If you if you put trees in where there was formerly a much smaller vegetation then.
00:20:45 Dr Ross Woods
Because it's a tree, it will catch more water on its leaves, and that has the opportunity to get evaporated away and its roots are deeper than a lot of other plants, so it can take more water out of the soil. So overall.
00:21:00 Dr Ross Woods
You do get drier soils.
00:21:02 Dr Ross Woods
If you have trees for other things, be equal. If you put trees in instead of grass, then you get drier soils.
00:21:09 Dr Ross Woods
And that's a good thing from flood reduction point of view, because if the soil is drier, there's more space to store water in it. And in the UK, having space in the soil to store water is the main way.
00:21:21 Dr Ross Woods
That.
00:21:23 Dr Ross Woods
Is a major control on the size of floods.
00:21:28 Dr Ross Woods
But yeah, the the story of the impact of trees is goes a lot further than what size of the floods.
00:21:37 Dr Ross Woods
So some some of it has an effect on your interest in droughts. Wonder if you want to.
00:21:42 Dr Ross Woods
Tell us a bit about that.
00:21:44 Dr Gemma Coxon
Yeah, so from a.
00:21:45 Dr Gemma Coxon
A drought perspective, you know, following on from your good description of what happens, you know when you plant, plant a tree, if you've got.
00:21:54 Dr Gemma Coxon
Got got less rainfall entering the soil system, so your soils are drier. You've got less water then you know flowing into your or kind of moving through the soil system into your rivers. But also you have less water recharging your groundwater systems. So in the UK.
00:22:14 Dr Gemma Coxon
1.
00:22:15 Dr Gemma Coxon
Of the key controls on river flows is.
00:22:18 Dr Gemma Coxon
The type of aquifer, essentially that underlays underlays the soil system and an aquifer essentially acts like a giant sponge. It soaks up all this water that's being infiltrated through the soils and gets recharged.
00:22:37 Dr Gemma Coxon
And then it slowly releases it out into the river.
00:22:42 Dr Gemma Coxon
Now if you have less water going into your giant sponge, you're going to have less water kind of being released into the river, and our groundwater systems are really important because they sustain quite a lot of water supply during the summer when rainfall is really low in the groundwater system.
00:23:02 Dr Gemma Coxon
You know that rain takes a long time to travel from hitting the land, going through the soil system, and then moving through that aquifer.
00:23:11 Dr Gemma Coxon
UM.
00:23:12 Dr Gemma Coxon
And so often in groundwater systems, you just get a nice, steady kind of base flow.
00:23:18 Dr Gemma Coxon
All throughout the year now, if you plant trees.
00:23:22 Dr Gemma Coxon
Might find that that base flow starts to get reduced and so we don't get that additional water that we would usually get in the summer. We don't get that water that's recharged, you know, from winter rainfall that's recharged back through the system.
00:23:36 Dr Gemma Coxon
And So what might be good for floods might not be so good for droughts.
00:23:43 Dr Ross Woods
I guess there's.
00:23:44 Dr Ross Woods
Lots of other dimensions of the tree planting question, the kind of outside the areas that we work in, things like.
00:23:53 Dr Ross Woods
Impacts on animal habitat and carbon capture.
00:24:00 Dr Ross Woods
Those sorts of things which are not really our field, they're also a really important part of deciding what would be a good policy for how we use our land.
00:24:10 Dr Ross Woods
And where would be really good places to plant. Trees will be places we might like to avoid.
00:24:18
And.
00:24:19 Dr Gemma Coxon
Building up the evidence base for that is actually it's quite challenging because as you said, we need to test it in a number of places because we know that you know, the terrestrial water system will act in interesting and surprisingly different ways depending on where we plant the trees.
00:24:40 Dr Gemma Coxon
We need to test.
00:24:41 Dr Gemma Coxon
That for a range of conditions and I don't know about you, Ross, but every time I've embarked on a project to study droughts, it's inevitable that, you know, the next five years there will be absolutely no droughts during during that period.
00:25:00 Dr Ross Woods
Well, maybe the water companies should hire you to get more research funded as a sort of insurance policy against.
00:25:12 Dr Gemma Coxon
Uh, that would be good. I'm so we need to test it in a lot of places we need to.
00:25:18 Dr Gemma Coxon
Test it for.
00:25:19 Dr Gemma Coxon
A range of events and you know we need to need to look at, look at, you know the different impacts like you were saying and I think it draws back into that interdisciplinary nature.
00:25:32 Dr Gemma Coxon
Of you know, we need to think about ecology and societal benefits of having a wetland and not just the impacts that it has ultimately on on the river flows and.
00:25:47 Dr Gemma Coxon
From a water perspective, I think you know, I think one of the reasons why we focus so much on rainfall changes, for example, is because they are easy to measure.
00:26:00 Dr Gemma Coxon
Relative relatively easy, easy to measure. Kind of the same as river flows, they're relatively easy to measure, but water flows through the subsurface because we can't see it. It's actually really difficult to measure, and I think that's why we get these surprises.
00:26:18 Dr Gemma Coxon
Because yeah, there are lots of things.
00:26:20 Dr Gemma Coxon
We still don't know.
00:26:22 Dr Ross Woods
If I was to say to you, if I allow you to put your hydrologist hat on for a moment and if you would be able to talk to.
00:26:30 Dr Ross Woods
A land use policy maker.
00:26:33 Dr Ross Woods
In the UK and you could have a chat with them.
00:26:36 Dr Ross Woods
About just the hydrological impacts of widespread widespread planting of trees, what would?
00:26:43 Dr Ross Woods
You say to them.
00:26:44 Dr Gemma Coxon
My my key message would be that we, yeah, we need to build this evidence base of what specifically these adaptations mean.
00:26:55 Dr Ross Woods
4.
00:26:56 Dr Gemma Coxon
Flies.
00:26:57 Dr Ross Woods
Yep. And would you say that on balance you'd expect the impacts of tree planting on droughts to be positive?
00:27:08 Dr Ross Woods
Would it improve the drought situation or might actually increase the risk of droughts?
00:27:14 Dr Gemma Coxon
I I honestly I I can't say that it.
00:27:17 Dr Gemma Coxon
It would kind.
00:27:17 Dr Gemma Coxon
Of depend on the drought event and where.
00:27:21 Dr Ross Woods
OK, it's a bit more subtle.
00:27:23 Dr Gemma Coxon
What do you think? Do you think there is?
00:27:25 Dr Gemma Coxon
A definitive answer.
00:27:27 Dr Ross Woods
What I think that in the places where the trees are planted.
00:27:33 Dr Ross Woods
Less of the water is going to get into aquifers and into rivers.
00:27:41 Dr Ross Woods
So I think that in those places.
00:27:44 Dr Ross Woods
I think that there's going to be less water available than there have been.
00:27:49 Dr Ross Woods
And so, yeah, I I do think that the risk of droughts is likely to increase if those trees are planted in places.
00:27:59 Dr Ross Woods
That are at the moment.
00:28:03 Dr Ross Woods
An important part of the water resource.
00:28:06 Dr Ross Woods
It's not so easy when you get put on.
00:28:07 Dr Ross Woods
The spot.
00:28:08 Dr Ross Woods
Is it?
00:28:12 Dr Gemma Coxon
No, it's not. And it's it's a typical scientist thing, I think, to do to sort of say here's a statement. But here's 1000 caveats to to this to this particular statement.
00:28:26 Dr Ross Woods
Yep. And yeah, there's difference between.
00:28:30 Dr Ross Woods
The conversations that you might have in a science forum.
00:28:36 Dr Ross Woods
And the conversations that you might have in.
00:28:38 Dr Ross Woods
A policy forum.
00:28:40 Dr Ross Woods
Because I think you know, I think the need for information is different.
00:28:46 Dr Ross Woods
That for the policy people.
00:28:50 Dr Ross Woods
We need to give it.
00:28:52 Dr Ross Woods
Our best shot.
00:28:55 Dr Ross Woods
Which is on this side or on this side.
00:29:00 Dr Ross Woods
And we we can give opinions about how confident we are.
00:29:04 Dr Ross Woods
We can offer a judgment about how confident we are in that statement, but I think, yeah, in those forums we need to have we need to indicate a direction.
00:29:14 Dr Ross Woods
If we possibly can.
00:29:16 Dr Ross Woods
But yeah, I think in this case there's been enough experimentation to know which direction the effect goes.
00:29:22 Dr Ross Woods
In.
00:29:25 Dr Ross Woods
A tricky bit is about saying well.
00:29:28 Dr Ross Woods
Because there are a whole bunch of other benefits.
00:29:32 Dr Ross Woods
Like the benefits for reduction, flooding for carbon capture for improved habitat.
00:29:40 Dr Ross Woods
Figuring out how to weigh.
00:29:41 Dr Ross Woods
Those up.
00:29:43 Dr Ross Woods
And yeah, that's quite tricky.
00:29:47 Dr Gemma Coxon
What do you think the major?
00:29:48 Dr Gemma Coxon
Challenges are on the flood side.
00:29:51 Dr Ross Woods
I think one of our big challenges is.
00:29:54 Dr Ross Woods
Untangling.
00:29:57 Dr Ross Woods
All the different things.
00:29:59 Dr Ross Woods
That are going on to cause floods to be the size that they are.
00:30:04 Dr Ross Woods
I think I'm speaking maybe a bit more from a science point of view.
00:30:10 Dr Ross Woods
That a management point of view, but it's one of the things that I find is really interesting about my job, is that the reason that floods are the size that they are is a huge combination. Lots of different things to do with.
00:30:25 Dr Ross Woods
Lots of different dimensions of the climate.
00:30:28 Dr Ross Woods
And also how the lens being used and what kind of soils there, what geology and geological history it's derived from?
00:30:40 Dr Ross Woods
Yeah, there's a huge number of things all tangled up together, and then when someone asks you a question about, well, what if I was to change one piece in this puzzle? If I was to change just the intensity of their rainfall but nothing else, or I was to change just the way that the land is used.
00:30:59 Dr Ross Woods
But nothing else that for me that means I have to know exactly.
00:31:06 Dr Ross Woods
What part in the puzzle?
00:31:08 Dr Ross Woods
So.
00:31:09 Dr Ross Woods
Piece was playing or the land cover piece was playing or the climate piece was playing, and at the moment what we get to see when we make measurements of what's happening in rivers is.
00:31:20 Dr Ross Woods
A combination of lots and lots and lots of different things.
00:31:23 Dr Ross Woods
Yeah, so for me.
00:31:25 Dr Ross Woods
For me, that's a big science challenges untangling all of those pieces.
00:31:31 Dr Ross Woods
I'm.
00:31:34 Dr Ross Woods
And because I'm not yet very clear on exactly how to untangle them, it means that it's quite a big challenge to say well.
00:31:43 Dr Ross Woods
So what if this happened? What if something changed in this place? How different would it be if rainfall changed in the southeast of the UK versus in the Northwest?
00:31:55 Dr Ross Woods
What difference does that make? And that's quite a tricky question to answer. Or what if I plant tree? What if I plant more trees in the southeast versus planting more trees in the northwest?
00:32:07
And.
00:32:07 Dr Gemma Coxon
Then when you get to kind of a a policy point of view taking, taking those you know very tricky kind of science recommendations and turning those into a series of you know adaptation measures.
00:32:22 Dr Gemma Coxon
To ensure we're.
00:32:24 Dr Gemma Coxon
You know in.
00:32:26 Dr Gemma Coxon
We're resilient, I guess, to to future events I think is is really challenging.
00:32:35 Dr Ross Woods
But in the end, I guess people still have to make decisions.
00:32:40 Dr Ross Woods
And.
00:32:42 Dr Ross Woods
So I think one of the challenges for us is being able to say.
00:32:47 Dr Ross Woods
How confident we are?
00:32:50 Dr Ross Woods
Or not? And how to have that information about confidence be useful?
00:32:56 Dr Ross Woods
To the people who are trying to make the decisions, because if someone asks.
00:32:59 Dr Ross Woods
Me and I say.
00:33:02 Dr Ross Woods
I think it's this much, but I really don't know. I mean, that's really not very helpful at all.
00:33:07 Dr Ross Woods
Just to say I'm uncertain.
00:33:10 Dr Ross Woods
But on the other hand, if I'm just to say or the answer is, 82 cubic metres per second.
00:33:17 Dr Ross Woods
That's not being very honest, because I I know that I don't know the answer that precisely.
00:33:23 Dr Ross Woods
There's uncertainty there, and that probably affects the way that people make decisions.
00:33:30 Dr Ross Woods
So yeah, handing over just the right amount of information about my uncertainties.
00:33:38 Dr Ross Woods
Yeah. Challenge something that.
00:33:42
I've.
00:33:43 Dr Gemma Coxon
Kind of been thinking about. It's also the the speed.
00:33:48 Dr Gemma Coxon
At which we need to make some of these decisions.
00:33:54 Dr Gemma Coxon
So you know, we have a climate.
00:33:56 Cabot Institute
That's.
00:33:57 Dr Gemma Coxon
You know quite rapidly changing.
00:34:00 Dr Gemma Coxon
We have a human population that is quite rapidly changing, dealing with those non stationary aspects, particularly when we don't have historic events to kind of base our understandings on. I think is a is a really interesting challenge. There's.
00:34:21 Dr Gemma Coxon
You know, how do you deliver the right information, but also at the right time. If you look at, for example, how the climate is projected to change in the next 30 or 40 years, if you look at the climate, you know the UK CPA team. So the UK climate projections from 2018.
00:34:41 Dr Gemma Coxon
If you look at look at that output and what they're projecting, I think in the in the sort of southwest for example, where we.
00:34:52 Dr Gemma Coxon
You know it's it's sort of around about a 3040% decrease in rainfall during the summer and around about 10 or 20% increase in rainfall during the winter. And those are quite, I mean those are significant shifts.
00:35:07 Dr Ross Woods
Yes, we haven't really been used to.
00:35:10 Dr Ross Woods
Planning for change? You know, we kind of we get in the habit.
00:35:14 Dr Ross Woods
Of thinking of.
00:35:16 Dr Ross Woods
Building stuff to suit the way things are now.
00:35:21 Dr Ross Woods
And it's.
00:35:22 Dr Ross Woods
I mean, although in the technical fields that we work in.
00:35:26 Dr Ross Woods
That idea of dealing with change is something we've been working on for 20 or 30 years, probably.
00:35:34 Dr Ross Woods
Getting that into the mindset of the entire society.
00:35:40 Dr Ross Woods
That's quite a big challenge. That's a.
00:35:42 Dr Ross Woods
So sort of cultural shift, almost that you don't expect the future to be quite like the past?
00:35:49 Dr Gemma Coxon
How do you think policy policymakers might?
00:35:52 Dr Gemma Coxon
Be able to.
00:35:54 Dr Gemma Coxon
Adapt to these changes or what do you think we need to be doing now to better adapt to these changes?
00:36:03 Dr Ross Woods
Some of it is.
00:36:06 Dr Ross Woods
Working with them on developing scenarios for how things might be different.
00:36:13 Dr Ross Woods
In the future, sort of imagining the future.
00:36:20 Dr Ross Woods
I think it's pretty difficult to actually imagine.
00:36:24 Dr Ross Woods
How things might be 30 years from now, what we might be wanting from water or dealing with water.
00:36:31 Dr Ross Woods
Don't really know, but I think.
00:36:33 Dr Ross Woods
Just the act of creating those scenarios.
00:36:37 Dr Ross Woods
Will help us maybe to realize that we might need some resilience to some kind of change and we might be guessing the wrong kind.
00:36:46 Dr Ross Woods
At the moment, because we can't see.
00:36:49 Dr Ross Woods
30 years ahead in the same way that when I was 20 year old, I couldn't have imagined the Internet.
00:36:56
Umm.
00:36:58 Dr Ross Woods
But I might have imagined that technology would develop and be different.
00:37:03 Dr Ross Woods
It's not in the particular way that it was that.
00:37:07 Dr Ross Woods
Having video calls with people was something that only happened on the Jetsons.
00:37:12 Dr Ross Woods
And not really anywhere else, but the concept of the video call exists and I think in the same way for future scenarios, imagining a scenario where we were.
00:37:25 Dr Ross Woods
Very short of water.
00:37:27 Dr Ross Woods
For some reason, and we can.
00:37:29 Dr Ross Woods
Create a scenario that helps that happen. That seems believable now, but it might not be.
00:37:33 Dr Ross Woods
Quite the right one.
00:37:35 Dr Ross Woods
But I think, yeah, the act of creating those scenarios and saying.
00:37:40 Dr Ross Woods
What if? What will? What will we do then?
00:37:45 Dr Ross Woods
Or what if what if floods were 20% bigger?
00:37:50 Dr Ross Woods
For now, now what would we do?
00:37:53 Dr Ross Woods
Where would we?
00:37:55 Dr Ross Woods
Where we want to live, where would we want to do things?
00:38:01 Dr Ross Woods
Which pieces of land would we treat as stable?
00:38:06 Dr Ross Woods
And secure.
00:38:09 Dr Ross Woods
Yeah. So I think those are useful thought exercises to have. Now we can have the opportunity.
00:38:17 Dr Ross Woods
To imagine bits of the future, at least.
00:38:20 Dr Gemma Coxon
I think that would be would be really productive and it's I guess it's not just policymakers that that you would need to build those scenarios and talk through those scenarios with it. It would be farmers and.
00:38:36 Dr Gemma Coxon
Land use policymakers and water resource managers and a whole.
00:38:42 Dr Gemma Coxon
Host of other other people.
00:38:45 Dr Ross Woods
People who might use water industries, water or food production or energy production.
00:38:54
War.
00:38:55 Dr Ross Woods
Waste management.
00:38:58 Dr Ross Woods
All aspects for dilution.
00:39:01 Dr Ross Woods
So maybe Jim, do you want to say a bit about?
00:39:06 Dr Ross Woods
What sorts of things make Bristol an interesting place and an yeah an interesting place for you to do this kind of work?
00:39:14 Dr Gemma Coxon
I'm in a good place to be able to talk about that, cause I I did my undergraduate at Bristol a very long time ago now.
00:39:23 Dr Gemma Coxon
And I I've never left, which I think I think tells you something about hopefully the strength and diversity of the water group at Bristol. I think we are incredibly fortunate.
00:39:45 Dr Gemma Coxon
To be part of a really thriving and interdisciplinary group and one of the things that I think makes.
00:39:56 Dr Gemma Coxon
The water group at Bristol, quite unique is that we have, you know, a lot of people.
00:40:05 Dr Gemma Coxon
Who work, you know, kind of in in similar areas but on different aspects, but we have a lot of people kind of who call themselves, you know, a hydrologist or a water resource specialist or someone who looks at the social aspects of water, for example.
00:40:27 Dr Gemma Coxon
UM.
00:40:28 Dr Gemma Coxon
And that means that we have these conversations frequently, you know, about how we can translate our science into something that has impact. And also we've spoken a lot in this discussion about.
00:40:49 Dr Gemma Coxon
You know, interdisciplinary measures and kind of working as part of the the water group, also through Cabot.
00:41:00 Dr Gemma Coxon
I think is is a really great way to kind of fuel those collaborations.
00:41:07 Dr Gemma Coxon
Anything else you'd like to add, but I know you've. You're a long time too now.
00:41:12 Dr Ross Woods
Not quite. As long as you almost, almost. I think one of the things I moved here about eight years ago and one of the things that I've really enjoyed is the feeling that I'm in a team environment.
00:41:26 Dr Ross Woods
And I really enjoy that a lot.
00:41:30 Dr Ross Woods
Yeah, it. I'm just tremendously lucky with the people I get to work with. It's fantastic.
00:41:36 Dr Gemma Coxon
So, boss, what's your key point you would like to get across to policymakers about the impacts of climate change on the water system?
00:41:48 Dr Ross Woods
The thing that I'd like to say is.
00:41:50 Dr Ross Woods
If you're going to use planting of more trees as.
00:41:56 Dr Ross Woods
One of the ways of reducing the impacts of climate change.
00:42:01 Dr Ross Woods
Then try to look beyond just the impacts on the carbon cycle and on carbon storage carbon capture, but also think about the impacts on the water cycle that planting more trees has a positive effect on the water cycle from the point of view of in some places reducing the size of floods.
00:42:22 Dr Ross Woods
Which is really great because the floods are significant source of damage for society.
00:42:28 Dr Ross Woods
But also think about the impacts of planting trees on droughts, because planting trees is likely to exacerbate make worse the risk of droughts. So.
00:42:40 Dr Ross Woods
Just a plea to weigh up all of those factors when you're looking for recommendations about how to mitigate impacts of climate change.
00:42:51 Dr Ross Woods
So, Gemma, if you were to have.
00:42:56 Dr Ross Woods
One message for policymakers about the impacts of climate change, what would you say to them?
00:43:03 Dr Gemma Coxon
I would say.
00:43:04 Dr Gemma Coxon
That a lot of the impacts of climate change are going to be felt through the water system. So whether that be.
00:43:15 Dr Gemma Coxon
Increased rainfall, potentially a resulting in a in a flooding event that you know impacts homes and families, or whether those changes in rainfall will result in more droughts. That means that we need to think about public water supply and.
00:43:35 Dr Gemma Coxon
How much water we have to irrigate crops?
00:43:39 Dr Gemma Coxon
It's not just.
00:43:42 Dr Gemma Coxon
Changes in our climate that are important, but it's thinking about how those changes in rainfall and temperature get translated into a change in how water moves through the terrestrial system. And so to engage with hydrologists to think about.
00:44:03 Dr Gemma Coxon
How those impacts of climate change will will manifest themselves.
00:44:13 Cabot Institute
You can find out more about the Cabot Institute for the environment at bristol.ac.uk/cabot.